Fixed nesting in documentation for custom folder paths

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Jaisen Mathai 2017-01-07 13:24:49 -08:00 committed by GitHub
parent 2b06610ff3
commit 26c9b85457
1 changed files with 7 additions and 5 deletions

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@ -191,11 +191,11 @@ Back to your photos. When I'm done you should see something like this. Notice th
Not too bad, eh? Wait a second, what's *Unknown Location*? If I'm not able to figure out where a photo was taken I'll place it into a folder named *Unknown Location*. This typically happens when photos do not have GPS information in their EXIF. You shouldn't see this for photos taken on a smartphone but it's often the case with digital cameras and SLRs. I can help you add GPS information to those photos and get them organized better. Let me show you how.
## Create your own folder structure
### Create your own folder structure
OK, so what if you don't like the folders being named "2016-01-Jan"? No problem!
OK, so what if you don't like the folders being named `2015-07-Jul/Mountain View`? No problem!
You can add a custom, date based folder structure by editing your `config.ini` file. This is what I include in the sample config file.
You can add a custom folder structure by editing your `config.ini` file. This is what I include in the sample config file.
```
[Directory]
@ -206,7 +206,9 @@ full_path=%date/%location
There needs to be 2 levels of folders and you can construct them using the date and location. Use `full_path` to determine how the 2 levels are nested. If for some reason your config is not correct I will use the default formatting which is found in `config.ini-sample`.
### Customizing the date format
The default formatting from the above config looks like `2015-07-Jul/Mountain View`.
#### Customizing the date format
You can use any of [the standard Python time directives](https://docs.python.org/2/library/datetime.html#strftime-and-strptime-behavior) to create your ideal structure.
@ -214,7 +216,7 @@ You can use any of [the standard Python time directives](https://docs.python.org
* For `Sunday, 01 January 2016`, use `date=%A, %d %B %Y`
* Python also has some pre-built formats. So you can get `Sun Jan 01 12:34:56 2016`, by using `%c`
### Customizing the location format
#### Customizing the location format
I use the [Open Street Maps Nominatim reverse geocoding API](http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Nominatim#Example) provided by MapQuest. You can use `city`, `state` and `country` to construct the folder name.