Table of Contents
If you attend a family party, a company meeting, a conference, or any other event where other KPhotoAlbum users may be present, you may wish to share your images with those people. You may of course choose to generate HTML pages for them to browse, but given you already have spent time classifying all images (Who is on the images, where were they taken etc), there are no reason for them to redo all that work.
KPhotoAlbum allows you to export a set of your images into a
.kim
file, which other people may import into
their database, to get your classification for these images.
Two different kind of .kim
files exists,
inlines or externals, referring to whether the images them self are
located in the file or at some other location. Placing the images in
the file has the obvious advantage that the file is self contained,
while it has the equally obvious disadvantage of the file being
rather big.
There are two places from which you may generate a
.kim
file, namely directly from
→ ,
or along with HTML pages (see Chapter 7, Generating HTML). Creating a
.kim
file during HTML export will create an
external .kim
file.
External .kim
files will search for images in
one of two ways. First it will try to look for the images next to the
.kim
file, and if not found, it will search for them
at the URL specified when the .kim
file was
created. Notice the later is only possible for
.kim
files created during HTML export.
This section will tell you about the export dialog which you get to from → .
The most important part of this dialog is specifying whether
the .kim
file should be internal or external
(see description above). You have the following three
options:
Include in
.kim
file - this will be an internal fileManual copy next to .kim file - Here you must copy the images yourself next to the .kim file
Automatically copy next to .kim file - here KPhotoAlbum will copy the images for you.
Between you and me, .kim
files are really
just zip files. Normally it is not worth bothering compressing the
files because images normally are compressed JPEG already, and the
XML file itself are really tiny. If you really want to squish out
the last few bytes, you may still do so, by checking
Compress Export File
The final option on the page are Limit maximum image
dimension. When sending some images to some friends,
you may not want to send images in full size, as the
.kim
file might be huge. For this, you may
specify that the maximum dimension of images should be say maximum 800
pixels in each direction.