iPhoto 6: The Missing Manual
A.4. Editing and Sharing
There's not much that can go wrong here, but when it does, it really goes wrong. A.4.1.
A.4.1.1. iPhoto crashes when I double-click a thumbnail to edit it.
You probably changed a photo file's name in the Finderin the iPhoto Library folder, behind the program's back. iPhoto hates this! Only grief can follow. Sometimes, too, a corrupted picture file will also make iPhoto crash when you try to edit it. Use the Show Image File script described in Section 13.5.2.10 to locate the scrambled file in the Finder. Open the file in another graphics program, use its File A.4.1.2. My Adjust panel is missing most of its sliders!
If your Mac has only a G3 processor inside, them's the breaks. All you get is Brightness and Contrast sliders. (The rest require a G4, G5, or Intel processor.) A.4.1.3. iPhoto won't let me use an external graphics program when I double-click a thumbnail.
Choose iPhoto Also make sure that your external editing program still exists . You might have upgraded to a newer version of that program, one whose file name is slightly different from the version you originally specified in iPhoto. A.4.1.4. I've messed up a photo while editing it, and now it's ruined!
Highlight the file's thumbnail and then choose Photos A.4.1.5. I published a photocast , and it wiped out another one!
Strange but true: For Web compatibility reasons, iPhoto treats accented letters ( , , «, and so on) as though they're all unaccented (e). It's possible, then, that you thought you were giving a photocast a different name, but because of this weirdness, you were naming it identically to your earlier photocast. The moral: Don't use accents in your album names . |