Not too important but I got rid of it anyway.zamacam wrote:I noticed a warning during compilation. I don't know if it's important or not.
Building Scan Tailor on OSX
Moderator: peterZ
Re: Building Scan Tailor on OSX
Scan Tailor experimental doesn't output 96 DPI images. It's just what your software shows when DPI information is missing. Usually what you get is input DPI times the resolution enhancement factor.
Re: Building Scan Tailor on OSX
I have built it in Snow Leopard 10.6, but my problem is that it is only utilizing one cpu core and it is so slow. I have 4 cores! I need it to use all of them. I need to find out how to build it so that it uses multiple cores.
Re: Building Scan Tailor on OSX
I think I may have the same problem...I have two cores. How can you tell how many cores it's using?SKIN wrote:I have built it in Snow Leopard 10.6, but my problem is that it is only utilizing one cpu core and it is so slow. I have 4 cores! I need it to use all of them. I need to find out how to build it so that it uses multiple cores.
Re: Building Scan Tailor on OSX
Scan Tailor doesn't distribute image processing to multiple cores. Theoretically, there are two ways to achieve that:
1. Process several pages at the same time.
2. Parallelize the most time consuming algorithms manually.
The first one is not too hard to implement, but unfortunately it would consume N times more memory which is just not acceptable.
1. Process several pages at the same time.
2. Parallelize the most time consuming algorithms manually.
The first one is not too hard to implement, but unfortunately it would consume N times more memory which is just not acceptable.
Scan Tailor experimental doesn't output 96 DPI images. It's just what your software shows when DPI information is missing. Usually what you get is input DPI times the resolution enhancement factor.
Re: Building Scan Tailor on OSX
Launch Activity Monitor and you can see the cpu usage for each core.clemd973 wrote:I think I may have the same problem...I have two cores. How can you tell how many cores it's using?SKIN wrote:I have built it in Snow Leopard 10.6, but my problem is that it is only utilizing one cpu core and it is so slow. I have 4 cores! I need it to use all of them. I need to find out how to build it so that it uses multiple cores.
Re: Building Scan Tailor on OSX
I compile ST for OS X using macports and the instructions on the sourceforge page. All quite easy. The only thing I would need to tweak is the size of one of the fonts in the Apply to... dialogue. As you can see from the following screen capture, part of the text is too small and illegible:
Where exactly would I make the font change in the source? Or, perhaps, the change could be made to the source code in the git repository?
Where exactly would I make the font change in the source? Or, perhaps, the change could be made to the source code in the git repository?
Re: Building Scan Tailor on OSX
The font size is specified in *.ui files. You can try modifying them with a text editor or download the full Qt package and open them in Qt Designer.
Scan Tailor experimental doesn't output 96 DPI images. It's just what your software shows when DPI information is missing. Usually what you get is input DPI times the resolution enhancement factor.
Re: Building Scan Tailor on OSX
Thank you. I have not looked at every .ui file yet, but it appears that, at least for the most part, the .ui files that specify font sizes are in sub-subfolders of the Filters folder.Tulon wrote:The font size is specified in *.ui files.
I was pleased to find that, as a result of installing and using macports, the full Qt package is already on my computer. That sure makes it easy!Tulon wrote:You can try modifying them with a text editor or download the full Qt package and open them in Qt Designer.
Odd that the 7-pt font is legible in ST under Windows but not under OS X. I would offer to change the font from 7 to 9 pts, but for my complete ignorance of git and how to commit changes - and the possibility that no one else has this legibility problem.
Re: Building Scan Tailor on OSX
Does 9pt font look fine? I'll check how it looks under Windows and Linux. If it's not too big, I'll make the change myself.
Scan Tailor experimental doesn't output 96 DPI images. It's just what your software shows when DPI information is missing. Usually what you get is input DPI times the resolution enhancement factor.
Re: Building Scan Tailor on OSX
Yes, 9 pt is okay. Thank you.