Siduction Forum
Siduction Forum => Software - Support => Topic started by: Lanzi on 2019/11/23, 19:54:46
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I have to scan about 40 pages and I remember that we had in KDE 3.5 a program (maybe Kscan) that scanned the pic and saved the file imedeatly afterwards with a ongoing number.
Is there still such a solution possible (without naming an lots of clicking)?Thanks
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I have noticed skanlite tries to automatically name each file after you feed it the name of the first scan. I suppose you could name your first scan "0001.png" and maybe skanlite will automatically number the rest of them. (I haven't tried this myself .....).
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I read about it before, but it seems it doesn't do this. But I will test it.
Xsane also has the option to renumber, but it does not work (at least it seams so).
Thanks again for your quick answer!
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xsane numbers names automatically here when Names are not changed.
regards
Reiner
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OK, I did the experiment. Using skanlite, I scanned the document, when it was finished I clicked "save", and I named it "20191124-0001" and saved it. Then I clicked "preview" and it prepared to scan again, and I clicked "scan" and when it was finished I clicked "save", and it offered to save the scan with the filename "20191124-0002". So, there you go. Not exactly automated scanning, but it will number the files sequentially.
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Thanks a lot Dibl!
Probaly the best solution we have now.The old KDE 3,5 program saved without any clicking at all, that was very comfortable for scanning older photos and documents. I do not remember how it was called. Maybe I should look for and old iso ;D
@Reiner:hmmm, not here... When I try to scan the second document, i need to click to overwrite, what I do not want.
So far the easiest solution is to rename the file "out.png" directly after the scan in the homefolder and then scan the next one...
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@Lanzi: Here an example when I start.
On the first image the "1" is changed to "0001" after scanstart.
On the second image after sucessfull scan the "0001" is automaticly changes to "0002".
regards
Reiner
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According to german Ubuntu wiki (the articles there are often worth reading), there should be a setting in xsane configuration for that (Überschreibwarnung an/aus, Existierende Dateinamen überspringen ein/aus, Dateinamenzähler Länge) : https://wiki.ubuntuusers.de/XSane/#Konfiguration
Perhaps you have an additional look at the overview article about different scannong software for some more ideas https://wiki.ubuntuusers.de/Scanner/Software/
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For me xsane works exactly as ReinerS described it and has all the settings in preferences/configuration that der_bud mentioned.
I do a lot of scans per day (one- and more-pagers) and xsane never let me down. Current version I use is 0.999-7.
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I dn't know If I was blind or stupid, but today it works as described :)
I checked all the settings with the help of the mentioned ubuntupage. Then it worked.
So, the problem was probably in front of the screen ;-)
Thanks to all who helped!
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Late to the party on this thread, but I learned about simple-scan (available in the Debian repos) a few months ago and now use that for my scanning needs, although there isn't an option to automatically save scans using a certain file name.