Hi,
Just tried to compile this latest version (win10 64 bit) using an older 
version of MSVC and get:

Error    56    error C2039: 'max' : is not a member of 'std'   
 E:\PHOTOGRAPHIC\HuginDLL\Hugin\src\hugin1\hugin\SplitButton.cpp    213   
 1    hugin
and
Error    57    error C3861: 'max': identifier not found   
 E:\PHOTOGRAPHIC\HuginDLL\Hugin\src\hugin1\hugin\SplitButton.cpp    213   
 1    hugin

Brian
On Saturday, July 30, 2022 at 7:06:43 PM UTC+10 [email protected] wrote:

> On Sat, 30 Jul 2022, 01:46 David W. Jones, wrote:
> >
> > Hey, Thomas and Bruno!
> >
> > On 7/29/22 09:17, Bruno Postle wrote:
> >
> > > The first lets you declare the lens type of your photos (if it can't be
> > > detected):
> >
> > Hmm. It seems complicated for the Assistant, which I think of as the
> > "beginners" tool. Would a beginner even know what the different lens
> > types mean?
>
> The previous Assistant tab had a drop down for lens type, plus focal
> length and crop factor, all in the space next to the first button.
> This was exposing deep photo techno stuff to first-time users that in
> reality would be auto-detected (if the focal length can't be detected
> in the EXIF metadata, you still get a pop-up asking for it as before).
>
> With the split button, the lens type options appear only if you click
> on the pull down arrow - and the first item is labelled as default, so
> I *hope* anyone exploring these will be gently made aware only that
> there are other possibilities.
>
> > > The second lets you run different alignment strategies.
> >
> > I like the wording of the options on the dropdown. They make functional
> > sense - user knows they have scanned images or have a dual-lens camera.
> > Although why are there two "Scanned images" entries - one plain, one
> > with TrXYZ? Would a beginner know what the difference is?
>
> The problem is that: although using the XYZ mosaic parameters to
> stitch scans is conceptually the right way to do it (because sometimes
> your 'scans' are from a mounted camera or microscope and need lens
> correction); the simple way of doing it that abuses the lens d&e
> parameters is more stable and works perfectly for flat-bed scanners.
>
> You can read the labels as 'scanned images' and 'scanned images using
> cryptic other stuff', which is about right.
>
> What I like about this new framework is you can try it, undo, try
> something else etc... Before, these assistant scripts were difficult
> to find.
>
> > > The third split menu gives various ways of stitching the final 
> panorama.
> >
> > This dropdown list definitely drops out of the beginner category!
> >
> > What does the "Zero-noise output" do?
>
> It is a photo technique where you shoot bracketed exposures and
> reconstruct a normal (non HDR) image that uses the lowest noise data
> for the dark areas of the image. It gives spookily high quality
> results, especially if you are printing. You need a tripod and a
> static scene, so it isn't an everyday technique:
> http://www.guillermoluijk.com/article/nonoise/index_en.htm
>
> > Does hovering over a number/button have a tooltip that explains things?
>
> The buttons have the same tooltips as before ("Load a series of
> images"), there are no tooltips for the individual menu entries.
>
> -- 
> Bruno
>

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