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I have been working on a Web-based photo album, and as part of this I wanted to resize a number of images to three different sizes — a large version for 1280 by 1024 screens, a medium version for 1024 by 768 screens and a small version for thumbprints. The images are always in the same directory, and the three smaller images are put into adjacent directories using the same name.
I have twice set up a Photoshop batch process to do this, and each time it has run immediately after I set it up, but I could never get it to run again. When I look in it I can see all the directories clearly specified, but when I try to run out again, it always asks me for the source and destination directories, and cannot seem to handle the three different output directories.
Even worse when I set it running it loads each image and then comes up with a diagnostic screen for each one. It seems to be impossible to stop it, other than with ctrl-alt-del, until it has gone through all the photos.
Is there some way of persuading it to use the information which it has already recorded in the batch process?
James McNangle
I have twice set up a Photoshop batch process to do this, and each time it has run immediately after I set it up, but I could never get it to run again. When I look in it I can see all the directories clearly specified, but when I try to run out again, it always asks me for the source and destination directories, and cannot seem to handle the three different output directories.
Even worse when I set it running it loads each image and then comes up with a diagnostic screen for each one. It seems to be impossible to stop it, other than with ctrl-alt-del, until it has gone through all the photos.
Is there some way of persuading it to use the information which it has already recorded in the batch process?
James McNangle
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