On Sat, Nov 2, 2019, at 13:39, Patrick Shanahan wrote:
> * jys <junkyardspar...@yepmail.net> [11-02-19 16:03]:
>>
> > Each module has a default ordering number, when a module is moved it gets a
> > new number between the numbers of its new neighbors. You can see these in
> > the XMP file as lines like
> >
> > darktable:iop_order="8.0000000000000"
> >
> > Modules which have been moved from their default location are likely to
> > have non-zero values after the decimal point.
> >
> > You can use the -d ioporder switch when launching dt to see information
> > about this happening.
>
> and how to find the default/original ioporder and to restore it?
Other than moving back to a point in the history stack before you moved
anything, there's no one-click method for this yet, but I believe it's planned.
If you're not sure about what you're doing, I'd suggest working on a duplicate.
You can always copy-and-paste selected new module settings back to the original
(which should keep new ordering as much as possible). In general, though,
changes to default ordering should only be done for a very deliberate reason
(and unlike unintentional scrolling of sliders, it's pretty much impossible to
do this by accident).
One thing worth noting: currently, creating a style doesn't store any changes
to ordering, so if you create a style from a history stack which includes
re-ordered modules, it won't recreate the ordering when applied, so don't try
to use styles (or presets, for that matter) to apply module re-ordering.
Hopefully there will eventually be a way to do this, but for now only
copy/paste will apply re-ordering from one history stack to another.
--
jys
___________________________________________________________________________
darktable developer mailing list
to unsubscribe send a mail to darktable-dev+unsubscr...@lists.darktable.org