Updated dependencies for python 3.11, #817, #825

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Rhet Turnbull 2022-11-12 20:02:09 -08:00
parent 6dc91fbc94
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README.md
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@ -12,8 +12,6 @@
OSXPhotos provides the ability to interact with and query Apple's Photos.app library on macOS. You can query the Photos library database — for example, file name, file path, and metadata such as keywords/tags, persons/faces, albums, etc. You can also easily export both the original and edited photos.
**NOTE: osxphotos does not currently run on python 3.11 due to issues with some of the dependencies. Please do not report any bugs related to python 3.11. osxphotos does run on python 3.8, 3.9, or 3.10 so install one of those if you want to use osxphotos.**
<p align="center"><img src="docs/screencast/demo.gif?raw=true" width="713" height="430"/></p>
# Table of Contents
@ -53,7 +51,7 @@ Only works on macOS (aka Mac OS X). Tested on macOS Sierra (10.12.6) through mac
This package will read Photos databases for any supported version on any supported macOS version. E.g. you can read a database created with Photos 5.0 on MacOS 10.15 on a machine running macOS 10.12 and vice versa.
Requires python >= `3.8`.
Requires python >= `3.9`.
## Installation
@ -2260,10 +2258,10 @@ Template statements are white-space sensitive meaning that white space (spaces,
e.g. if Photo keywords are `["foo","bar"]`:
- `"{keyword}"` renders to `"foo", "bar"`
- `"{,+keyword}"` renders to: `"foo,bar"`
- `"{; +keyword}"` renders to: `"foo; bar"`
- `"{+keyword}"` renders to `"foobar"`
* `"{keyword}"` renders to `"foo", "bar"`
* `"{,+keyword}"` renders to: `"foo,bar"`
* `"{; +keyword}"` renders to: `"foo; bar"`
* `"{+keyword}"` renders to `"foobar"`
`template_field`: The template field to resolve. See [Template Substitutions](#template-substitutions) for full list of template fields.
@ -2275,75 +2273,75 @@ e.g. if Photo keywords are `["foo","bar"]`:
Valid filters are:
- `lower`: Convert value to lower case, e.g. 'Value' => 'value'.
- `upper`: Convert value to upper case, e.g. 'Value' => 'VALUE'.
- `strip`: Strip whitespace from beginning/end of value, e.g. ' Value ' => 'Value'.
- `titlecase`: Convert value to title case, e.g. 'my value' => 'My Value'.
- `capitalize`: Capitalize first word of value and convert other words to lower case, e.g. 'MY VALUE' => 'My value'.
- `braces`: Enclose value in curly braces, e.g. 'value => '{value}'.
- `parens`: Enclose value in parentheses, e.g. 'value' => '(value')
- `brackets`: Enclose value in brackets, e.g. 'value' => '[value]'
- `shell_quote`: Quotes the value for safe usage in the shell, e.g. My file.jpeg => 'My file.jpeg'; only adds quotes if needed.
- `function`: Run custom python function to filter value; use in format 'function:/path/to/file.py::function_name'. See example at https://github.com/RhetTbull/osxphotos/blob/master/examples/template_filter.py
- `split(x)`: Split value into a list of values using x as delimiter, e.g. 'value1;value2' => ['value1', 'value2'] if used with split(;).
- `autosplit`: Automatically split delimited string into separate values; will split strings delimited by comma, semicolon, or space, e.g. 'value1,value2' => ['value1', 'value2'].
- `chop(x)`: Remove x characters off the end of value, e.g. chop(1): 'Value' => 'Valu'; when applied to a list, chops characters from each list value, e.g. chop(1): ['travel', 'beach']=> ['trave', 'beac'].
- `chomp(x)`: Remove x characters from the beginning of value, e.g. chomp(1): ['Value'] => ['alue']; when applied to a list, removes characters from each list value, e.g. chomp(1): ['travel', 'beach']=> ['ravel', 'each'].
- `sort`: Sort list of values, e.g. ['c', 'b', 'a'] => ['a', 'b', 'c'].
- `rsort`: Sort list of values in reverse order, e.g. ['a', 'b', 'c'] => ['c', 'b', 'a'].
- `reverse`: Reverse order of values, e.g. ['a', 'b', 'c'] => ['c', 'b', 'a'].
- `uniq`: Remove duplicate values, e.g. ['a', 'b', 'c', 'b', 'a'] => ['a', 'b', 'c'].
- `join(x)`: Join list of values with delimiter x, e.g. join(,): ['a', 'b', 'c'] => 'a,b,c'; the DELIM option functions similar to join(x) but with DELIM, the join happens before being passed to any filters.May optionally be used without an argument, that is 'join()' which joins values together with no delimiter. e.g. join(): ['a', 'b', 'c'] => 'abc'.
- `append(x)`: Append x to list of values, e.g. append(d): ['a', 'b', 'c'] => ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'].
- `prepend(x)`: Prepend x to list of values, e.g. prepend(d): ['a', 'b', 'c'] => ['d', 'a', 'b', 'c'].
- `remove(x)`: Remove x from list of values, e.g. remove(b): ['a', 'b', 'c'] => ['a', 'c'].
- `slice(start:stop:step)`: Slice list using same semantics as Python's list slicing, e.g. slice(1:3): ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] => ['b', 'c']; slice(1:4:2): ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] => ['b', 'd']; slice(1:): ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] => ['b', 'c', 'd']; slice(:-1): ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] => ['a', 'b', 'c']; slice(::-1): ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] => ['d', 'c', 'b', 'a']. See also sslice().
- `sslice(start:stop:step)`: [s(tring) slice] Slice values in a list using same semantics as Python's string slicing, e.g. sslice(1:3):'abcd => 'bc'; sslice(1:4:2): 'abcd' => 'bd', etc. See also slice().
- `filter(x)`: Filter list of values using predicate x; for example, `{folder_album|filter(contains Events)}` returns only folders/albums containing the word 'Events' in their path.
- `int`: Convert values in list to integer, e.g. 1.0 => 1. If value cannot be converted to integer, remove value from list. ['1.1', 'x'] => ['1']. See also float.
- `float`: Convert values in list to floating point number, e.g. 1 => 1.0. If value cannot be converted to float, remove value from list. ['1', 'x'] => ['1.0']. See also int.
* `lower`: Convert value to lower case, e.g. 'Value' => 'value'.
* `upper`: Convert value to upper case, e.g. 'Value' => 'VALUE'.
* `strip`: Strip whitespace from beginning/end of value, e.g. ' Value ' => 'Value'.
* `titlecase`: Convert value to title case, e.g. 'my value' => 'My Value'.
* `capitalize`: Capitalize first word of value and convert other words to lower case, e.g. 'MY VALUE' => 'My value'.
* `braces`: Enclose value in curly braces, e.g. 'value => '{value}'.
* `parens`: Enclose value in parentheses, e.g. 'value' => '(value')
* `brackets`: Enclose value in brackets, e.g. 'value' => '[value]'
* `shell_quote`: Quotes the value for safe usage in the shell, e.g. My file.jpeg => 'My file.jpeg'; only adds quotes if needed.
* `function`: Run custom python function to filter value; use in format 'function:/path/to/file.py::function_name'. See example at <https://github.com/RhetTbull/osxphotos/blob/master/examples/template_filter.py>
* `split(x)`: Split value into a list of values using x as delimiter, e.g. 'value1;value2' => ['value1', 'value2'] if used with split(;).
* `autosplit`: Automatically split delimited string into separate values; will split strings delimited by comma, semicolon, or space, e.g. 'value1,value2' => ['value1', 'value2'].
* `chop(x)`: Remove x characters off the end of value, e.g. chop(1): 'Value' => 'Valu'; when applied to a list, chops characters from each list value, e.g. chop(1): ['travel', 'beach']=> ['trave', 'beac'].
* `chomp(x)`: Remove x characters from the beginning of value, e.g. chomp(1): ['Value'] => ['alue']; when applied to a list, removes characters from each list value, e.g. chomp(1): ['travel', 'beach']=> ['ravel', 'each'].
* `sort`: Sort list of values, e.g. ['c', 'b', 'a'] => ['a', 'b', 'c'].
* `rsort`: Sort list of values in reverse order, e.g. ['a', 'b', 'c'] => ['c', 'b', 'a'].
* `reverse`: Reverse order of values, e.g. ['a', 'b', 'c'] => ['c', 'b', 'a'].
* `uniq`: Remove duplicate values, e.g. ['a', 'b', 'c', 'b', 'a'] => ['a', 'b', 'c'].
* `join(x)`: Join list of values with delimiter x, e.g. join(,): ['a', 'b', 'c'] => 'a,b,c'; the DELIM option functions similar to join(x) but with DELIM, the join happens before being passed to any filters.May optionally be used without an argument, that is 'join()' which joins values together with no delimiter. e.g. join(): ['a', 'b', 'c'] => 'abc'.
* `append(x)`: Append x to list of values, e.g. append(d): ['a', 'b', 'c'] => ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'].
* `prepend(x)`: Prepend x to list of values, e.g. prepend(d): ['a', 'b', 'c'] => ['d', 'a', 'b', 'c'].
* `remove(x)`: Remove x from list of values, e.g. remove(b): ['a', 'b', 'c'] => ['a', 'c'].
* `slice(start:stop:step)`: Slice list using same semantics as Python's list slicing, e.g. slice(1:3): ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] => ['b', 'c']; slice(1:4:2): ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] => ['b', 'd']; slice(1:): ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] => ['b', 'c', 'd']; slice(:-1): ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] => ['a', 'b', 'c']; slice(::-1): ['a', 'b', 'c', 'd'] => ['d', 'c', 'b', 'a']. See also sslice().
* `sslice(start:stop:step)`: [s(tring) slice] Slice values in a list using same semantics as Python's string slicing, e.g. sslice(1:3):'abcd => 'bc'; sslice(1:4:2): 'abcd' => 'bd', etc. See also slice().
* `filter(x)`: Filter list of values using predicate x; for example, `{folder_album|filter(contains Events)}` returns only folders/albums containing the word 'Events' in their path.
* `int`: Convert values in list to integer, e.g. 1.0 => 1. If value cannot be converted to integer, remove value from list. ['1.1', 'x'] => ['1']. See also float.
* `float`: Convert values in list to floating point number, e.g. 1 => 1.0. If value cannot be converted to float, remove value from list. ['1', 'x'] => ['1.0']. See also int.
e.g. if Photo keywords are `["FOO","bar"]`:
- `"{keyword|lower}"` renders to `"foo", "bar"`
- `"{keyword|upper}"` renders to: `"FOO", "BAR"`
- `"{keyword|capitalize}"` renders to: `"Foo", "Bar"`
- `"{keyword|lower|parens}"` renders to: `"(foo)", "(bar)"`
* `"{keyword|lower}"` renders to `"foo", "bar"`
* `"{keyword|upper}"` renders to: `"FOO", "BAR"`
* `"{keyword|capitalize}"` renders to: `"Foo", "Bar"`
* `"{keyword|lower|parens}"` renders to: `"(foo)", "(bar)"`
e.g. if Photo description is "my description":
- `"{descr|titlecase}"` renders to: `"My Description"`
* `"{descr|titlecase}"` renders to: `"My Description"`
e.g. If Photo is in `Album1` in `Folder1`:
- `"{folder_album}"` renders to `["Folder1/Album1"]`
- `"{folder_album(>)}"` renders to `["Folder1>Album1"]`
- `"{folder_album()}"` renders to `["Folder1Album1"]`
* `"{folder_album}"` renders to `["Folder1/Album1"]`
* `"{folder_album(>)}"` renders to `["Folder1>Album1"]`
* `"{folder_album()}"` renders to `["Folder1Album1"]`
`[find,replace]`: optional text replacement to perform on rendered template value. For example, to replace "/" in an album name, you could use the template `"{album[/,-]}"`. Multiple replacements can be made by appending "|" and adding another find|replace pair. e.g. to replace both "/" and ":" in album name: `"{album[/,-|:,-]}"`. find/replace pairs are not limited to single characters. The "|" character cannot be used in a find/replace pair.
`conditional`: optional conditional expression that is evaluated as boolean (True/False) for use with the `?bool_value` modifier. Conditional expressions take the form '`not operator value`' where `not` is an optional modifier that negates the `operator`. Note: the space before the conditional expression is required if you use a conditional expression. Valid comparison operators are:
- `contains`: template field contains value, similar to python's `in`
- `matches`: template field contains exactly value, unlike `contains`: does not match partial matches
- `startswith`: template field starts with value
- `endswith`: template field ends with value
- `<=`: template field is less than or equal to value
- `>=`: template field is greater than or equal to value
- `<`: template field is less than value
- `>`: template field is greater than value
- `==`: template field equals value
- `!=`: template field does not equal value
* `contains`: template field contains value, similar to python's `in`
* `matches`: template field contains exactly value, unlike `contains`: does not match partial matches
* `startswith`: template field starts with value
* `endswith`: template field ends with value
* `<=`: template field is less than or equal to value
* `>=`: template field is greater than or equal to value
* `<`: template field is less than value
* `>`: template field is greater than value
* `==`: template field equals value
* `!=`: template field does not equal value
The `value` part of the conditional expression is treated as a bare (unquoted) word/phrase. Multiple values may be separated by '|' (the pipe symbol). `value` is itself a template statement so you can use one or more template fields in `value` which will be resolved before the comparison occurs.
For example:
- `{keyword matches Beach}` resolves to True if 'Beach' is a keyword. It would not match keyword 'BeachDay'.
- `{keyword contains Beach}` resolves to True if any keyword contains the word 'Beach' so it would match both 'Beach' and 'BeachDay'.
- `{photo.score.overall > 0.7}` resolves to True if the photo's overall aesthetic score is greater than 0.7.
- `{keyword|lower contains beach}` uses the lower case filter to do case-insensitive matching to match any keyword that contains the word 'beach'.
- `{keyword|lower not contains beach}` uses the `not` modifier to negate the comparison so this resolves to True if there is no keyword that matches 'beach'.
* `{keyword matches Beach}` resolves to True if 'Beach' is a keyword. It would not match keyword 'BeachDay'.
* `{keyword contains Beach}` resolves to True if any keyword contains the word 'Beach' so it would match both 'Beach' and 'BeachDay'.
* `{photo.score.overall > 0.7}` resolves to True if the photo's overall aesthetic score is greater than 0.7.
* `{keyword|lower contains beach}` uses the lower case filter to do case-insensitive matching to match any keyword that contains the word 'beach'.
* `{keyword|lower not contains beach}` uses the `not` modifier to negate the comparison so this resolves to True if there is no keyword that matches 'beach'.
Examples: to export photos that contain certain keywords with the `osxphotos export` command's `--directory` option:
@ -2360,24 +2358,24 @@ This renames any photo that is a favorite as 'Favorite-ImageName.jpg' (where 'Im
e.g. if photo is an HDR image,
- `"{hdr?ISHDR,NOTHDR}"` renders to `"ISHDR"`
* `"{hdr?ISHDR,NOTHDR}"` renders to `"ISHDR"`
and if it is not an HDR image,
- `"{hdr?ISHDR,NOTHDR}"` renders to `"NOTHDR"`
* `"{hdr?ISHDR,NOTHDR}"` renders to `"NOTHDR"`
`,default`: optional default value to use if the template name has no value. This modifier is also used for the value if False for boolean-type fields (see above) as well as to hold a sub-template for values like `{created.strftime}`. If no default value provided, "_" is used.
e.g., if photo has no title set,
- `"{title}"` renders to "_"
- `"{title,I have no title}"` renders to `"I have no title"`
* `"{title}"` renders to "_"
* `"{title,I have no title}"` renders to `"I have no title"`
Template fields such as `created.strftime` use the default value to pass the template to use for `strftime`.
e.g., if photo date is 4 February 2020, 19:07:38,
- `"{created.strftime,%Y-%m-%d-%H%M%S}"` renders to `"2020-02-04-190738"`
* `"{created.strftime,%Y-%m-%d-%H%M%S}"` renders to `"2020-02-04-190738"`
Some template fields such as `"{media_type}"` use the default value to allow customization of the output. For example, `"{media_type}"` resolves to the special media type of the photo such as `panorama` or `selfie`. You may use the default value to override these in form: `"{media_type,video=vidéo;time_lapse=vidéo_accélérée}"`. In this example, if photo was a time_lapse photo, `media_type` would resolve to `vidéo_accélérée` instead of `time_lapse`.
@ -2426,7 +2424,7 @@ The following template field substitutions are availabe for use the templating s
|{created.hour}|2-digit hour of the photo creation time|
|{created.min}|2-digit minute of the photo creation time|
|{created.sec}|2-digit second of the photo creation time|
|{created.strftime}|Apply strftime template to file creation date/time. Should be used in form {created.strftime,TEMPLATE} where TEMPLATE is a valid strftime template, e.g. {created.strftime,%Y-%U} would result in year-week number of year: '2020-23'. If used with no template will return null value. See https://strftime.org/ for help on strftime templates.|
|{created.strftime}|Apply strftime template to file creation date/time. Should be used in form {created.strftime,TEMPLATE} where TEMPLATE is a valid strftime template, e.g. {created.strftime,%Y-%U} would result in year-week number of year: '2020-23'. If used with no template will return null value. See <https://strftime.org/> for help on strftime templates.|
|{modified}|Photo's modification date in ISO format, e.g. '2020-03-22'; uses creation date if photo is not modified|
|{modified.date}|Photo's modification date in ISO format, e.g. '2020-03-22'; uses creation date if photo is not modified|
|{modified.year}|4-digit year of photo modification time; uses creation date if photo is not modified|
@ -2440,7 +2438,7 @@ The following template field substitutions are availabe for use the templating s
|{modified.hour}|2-digit hour of the photo modification time; uses creation date if photo is not modified|
|{modified.min}|2-digit minute of the photo modification time; uses creation date if photo is not modified|
|{modified.sec}|2-digit second of the photo modification time; uses creation date if photo is not modified|
|{modified.strftime}|Apply strftime template to file modification date/time. Should be used in form {modified.strftime,TEMPLATE} where TEMPLATE is a valid strftime template, e.g. {modified.strftime,%Y-%U} would result in year-week number of year: '2020-23'. If used with no template will return null value. Uses creation date if photo is not modified. See https://strftime.org/ for help on strftime templates.|
|{modified.strftime}|Apply strftime template to file modification date/time. Should be used in form {modified.strftime,TEMPLATE} where TEMPLATE is a valid strftime template, e.g. {modified.strftime,%Y-%U} would result in year-week number of year: '2020-23'. If used with no template will return null value. Uses creation date if photo is not modified. See <https://strftime.org/> for help on strftime templates.|
|{today}|Current date in iso format, e.g. '2020-03-22'|
|{today.date}|Current date in iso format, e.g. '2020-03-22'|
|{today.year}|4-digit year of current date|
@ -2454,7 +2452,7 @@ The following template field substitutions are availabe for use the templating s
|{today.hour}|2-digit hour of the current date|
|{today.min}|2-digit minute of the current date|
|{today.sec}|2-digit second of the current date|
|{today.strftime}|Apply strftime template to current date/time. Should be used in form {today.strftime,TEMPLATE} where TEMPLATE is a valid strftime template, e.g. {today.strftime,%Y-%U} would result in year-week number of year: '2020-23'. If used with no template will return null value. See https://strftime.org/ for help on strftime templates.|
|{today.strftime}|Apply strftime template to current date/time. Should be used in form {today.strftime,TEMPLATE} where TEMPLATE is a valid strftime template, e.g. {today.strftime,%Y-%U} would result in year-week number of year: '2020-23'. If used with no template will return null value. See <https://strftime.org/> for help on strftime templates.|
|{place.name}|Place name from the photo's reverse geolocation data, as displayed in Photos|
|{place.country_code}|The ISO country code from the photo's reverse geolocation data|
|{place.name.country}|Country name from the photo's reverse geolocation data|
@ -2505,17 +2503,17 @@ The following template field substitutions are availabe for use the templating s
|{label}|Image categorization label associated with a photo (Photos 5+ only). Labels are added automatically by Photos using machine learning algorithms to categorize images. These are not the same as {keyword} which refers to the user-defined keywords/tags applied in Photos.|
|{label_normalized}|All lower case version of 'label' (Photos 5+ only)|
|{comment}|Comment(s) on shared Photos; format is 'Person name: comment text' (Photos 5+ only)|
|{exiftool}|Format: '{exiftool:GROUP:TAGNAME}'; use exiftool (https://exiftool.org) to extract metadata, in form GROUP:TAGNAME, from image. E.g. '{exiftool:EXIF:Make}' to get camera make, or {exiftool:IPTC:Keywords} to extract keywords. See https://exiftool.org/TagNames/ for list of valid tag names. You must specify group (e.g. EXIF, IPTC, etc) as used in `exiftool -G`. exiftool must be installed in the path to use this template.|
|{exiftool}|Format: '{exiftool:GROUP:TAGNAME}'; use exiftool (<https://exiftool.org>) to extract metadata, in form GROUP:TAGNAME, from image. E.g. '{exiftool:EXIF:Make}' to get camera make, or {exiftool:IPTC:Keywords} to extract keywords. See <https://exiftool.org/TagNames/> for list of valid tag names. You must specify group (e.g. EXIF, IPTC, etc) as used in `exiftool -G`. exiftool must be installed in the path to use this template.|
|{searchinfo.holiday}|Holiday names associated with a photo, e.g. 'Christmas Day'; (Photos 5+ only, applied automatically by Photos' image categorization algorithms).|
|{searchinfo.activity}|Activities associated with a photo, e.g. 'Sporting Event'; (Photos 5+ only, applied automatically by Photos' image categorization algorithms).|
|{searchinfo.venue}|Venues associated with a photo, e.g. name of restaurant; (Photos 5+ only, applied automatically by Photos' image categorization algorithms).|
|{searchinfo.venue_type}|Venue types associated with a photo, e.g. 'Restaurant'; (Photos 5+ only, applied automatically by Photos' image categorization algorithms).|
|{photo}|Provides direct access to the PhotoInfo object for the photo. Must be used in format '{photo.property}' where 'property' represents a PhotoInfo property. For example: '{photo.favorite}' is the same as '{favorite}' and '{photo.place.name}' is the same as '{place.name}'. '{photo}' provides access to properties that are not available as separate template fields but it assumes some knowledge of the underlying PhotoInfo class. See https://rhettbull.github.io/osxphotos/ for additional documentation on the PhotoInfo class.|
|{photo}|Provides direct access to the PhotoInfo object for the photo. Must be used in format '{photo.property}' where 'property' represents a PhotoInfo property. For example: '{photo.favorite}' is the same as '{favorite}' and '{photo.place.name}' is the same as '{place.name}'. '{photo}' provides access to properties that are not available as separate template fields but it assumes some knowledge of the underlying PhotoInfo class. See <https://rhettbull.github.io/osxphotos/> for additional documentation on the PhotoInfo class.|
|{detected_text}|List of text strings found in the image after performing text detection. Using '{detected_text}' will cause osxphotos to perform text detection on your photos using the built-in macOS text detection algorithms which will slow down your export. The results for each photo will be cached in the export database so that future exports with '--update' do not need to reprocess each photo. You may pass a confidence threshold value between 0.0 and 1.0 after a colon as in '{detected_text:0.5}'; The default confidence threshold is 0.75. '{detected_text}' works only on macOS Catalina (10.15) or later. Note: this feature is not the same thing as Live Text in macOS Monterey, which osxphotos does not yet support.|
|{shell_quote}|Use in form '{shell_quote,TEMPLATE}'; quotes the rendered TEMPLATE value(s) for safe usage in the shell, e.g. My file.jpeg => 'My file.jpeg'; only adds quotes if needed.|
|{strip}|Use in form '{strip,TEMPLATE}'; strips whitespace from begining and end of rendered TEMPLATE value(s).|
|{format}|Use in form, '{format:TYPE:FORMAT,TEMPLATE}'; converts TEMPLATE value to TYPE then formats the value using Python string formatting codes specified by FORMAT; TYPE is one of: 'int', 'float', or 'str'. For example, '{format:float:.1f,{exiftool:EXIF:FocalLength}}' will format focal length to 1 decimal place (e.g. '100.0'). |
|{function}|Execute a python function from an external file and use return value as template substitution. Use in format: {function:file.py::function_name} where 'file.py' is the name of the python file and 'function_name' is the name of the function to call. The function will be passed the PhotoInfo object for the photo. See https://github.com/RhetTbull/osxphotos/blob/master/examples/template_function.py for an example of how to implement a template function.|
|{function}|Execute a python function from an external file and use return value as template substitution. Use in format: {function:file.py::function_name} where 'file.py' is the name of the python file and 'function_name' is the name of the function to call. The function will be passed the PhotoInfo object for the photo. See <https://github.com/RhetTbull/osxphotos/blob/master/examples/template_function.py> for an example of how to implement a template function.|
<!-- OSXPHOTOS-TEMPLATE-TABLE:END -->
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@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ rich>=11.2.0,<13.0.0
rich_theme_manager>=0.11.0
shortuuid==1.0.9
tenacity>=8.0.1,<9.0.0
textx>=2.3.0,<2.4.0
textx>=3.0.0,<4.0.0
toml>=0.10.2,<0.11.0
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@ -67,9 +67,9 @@ setup(
"Intended Audience :: Developers",
"License :: OSI Approved :: MIT License",
"Operating System :: MacOS :: MacOS X",
"Programming Language :: Python :: 3.8",
"Programming Language :: Python :: 3.9",
"Programming Language :: Python :: 3.10",
"Programming Language :: Python :: 3.11",
"Topic :: Software Development :: Libraries :: Python Modules",
],
install_requires=[
@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ setup(
"rich_theme_manager>=0.11.0",
"shortuuid==1.0.9",
"tenacity>=8.0.1,<9.0.0",
"textx>=2.3.0,<3.0.0",
"textx>=3.0.0,<4.0.0",
"toml>=0.10.2,<0.11.0",
"wrapt>=1.14.1,<2.0.0",
"wurlitzer>=3.0.2,<4.0.0",