![]() ![]() Share To share the file with others, select: The message where the file was attachedīy default, the file opens inside Teams with the standard Office tools available at the top of the screen.ĭepending on the file type, you’ll see the some of the following buttons in the top right of the Teams screen.Įditing Here you can indicate whether you want to work with the file as an editor (the default) or reviewer, or simply view the file.The Files tab at the top of a chat or channel.The files list when you select Files on the left side of Teams.Select a file from any of these locations: To edit files on your mobile device, open them in their respective Office mobile apps.Įdit an Office file in its desktop or web app Edit a file directly in Teams Why you do not throw all image in ONE folder, select all and let do the renamer do the rest?ĭoes not matter, if the files comes from different days, with good preferences the renamer will do all correct.Non-Office files must be edited in their corresponding apps and then uploaded to Teams again. Why so complicated (with your Sony tool)? When I import the pictures from the last 20 days, this can take quite some time and is frustratingly stupid. Once I am done with all pictures, I need to change the filter from JPG to Movies, and do the exact same thing again for all movies. Still, I have to click each folder, do Ctrl-A to select all files, Ctrl-F2 to call the renamer, run. Well, I have the files in daily folders, this is what Sony PMB tool does. "Added today" shows only files added today so your rename op should work out of the box. Quote from: Mario on May 06, 2017, 11:34:20 AMĭata-driven category with day as the lowest level? Integrated your peculiar "Run different rename procedures, depending on the file format and what other conditions" could prove impossible or a bug magnet. Or I could spend several weeks developing such a feature, creating something that may work for 50$ of the user base or else becoming so complex that it would work for 5% but all others would not use it because it's to complicated. ![]() If IMatch would be simpler (no buddy file handling, no metadata propagation, no versioning, no. I doubt that this takes more than a few seconds. Use the filter panel (with pre-made and stored filters for speed) to filter for pictures or movies. Use the "Added today" collection to see all files added today. It's the most safe and reliable way to do this. via a Favorite - costs only one click) is not too much of a burden for most users. Metadata propagation can take place at any time during the ingest, and it gets even more complex when the user runs automatic write-back, which causes a re-ingest of files, metadata changes caused by that and metadata propagation in-between. Others involve versioning, metadata propagation and more things like this. QuoteI know that automating this would be difficult, as Imatch would need to wait to complete the import before renaming, otherwise it would miss the buddy files.That's just one of the reasons. I know that automating this would be difficult, as Imatch would need to wait to complete the import before renaming, otherwise it would miss the buddy files. Movies and Pics: They have different schemas and a different sequence, so I need to do them separately.Īs you can see, renaming involves a lot of steps for me. This is why I have to run the renamer per folder.Įxample: 20170414-115601-002.JPG is the second image I took that day. Numbering scheme: My renaming scheme contains a sequence. From the temp folders, I move with Imatch to the final folder. Tool used is Sony PlayMemories, as this pulls the movies with its sidecars correctly and because it puts everything in daily folders. ![]() Import: I import to daily temporary folders that are indexed by Imatch. Right now I am doing this manually: Selecting files in a folder and using the renamer. Spent 20 minutes searching the help and the forum without success, so opening a topic here: ![]()
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