How can I make web pages with ThumbNailer?
If you have v6.3 or higher, you can use the HTML wizard to help get you going. If you have an earlier version, or would like to learn more, read on… We’ll start with the main window and move on to the advanced options. • First, you need to make sure that your Source and Destination folders are on the same drive. If they are not on the same drive, ThumbNailer will be unable to generate “relative” links. As this is critical for HTML files, ThumbNailer will refuse to even try to produce HTML files if source and destination folders are on different drives. We recommend that you choose a destination folder that is a sibling of the source folder. Ex. C:\pix\source and C:\pix\dest • Second, you need to decide some thumbnail options. Thumbnail size is up to you (100×100, best fit is good for web thumbnails). We recommend that you choose JPG, GIF or PNG as the output format for your thumbnails as few web browsers support any other image file formats. On to advanced options (this tutorial is w
If you have v6.3 or higher, you can use the HTML wizard to help get you going. If you have an earlier version, or would like to learn more, read on… We’ll start with the main window and move on to the advanced options. • First, you need to make sure that your Source and Destination folders are on the same drive. If they are not on the same drive, ThumbNailer will be unable to generate “relative” links. As this is critical for HTML files, ThumbNailer will refuse to even try to produce HTML files if source and destination folders are on different drives. We recommend that you choose a destination folder that is a sibling of the source folder. Ex. C:\pix\source and C:\pix\dest • Second, you need to decide some thumbnail options. Thumbnail size is up to you (100×100, best fit is good for web thumbnails). We recommend that you choose JPG, GIF or PNG as the output format for your thumbnails as few web browsers support any other image file formats. On to advanced options (this tutorial is w