NAME
Photography::DX - Encode/decode DX film codes
VERSION
version 0.02
SYNOPSIS
use Photography::DX;
my $film = Photography::DX->new(
speed => 100,
length => 36,
tolerance => 2,
);
# print out the layout of contacts
# on the roll of film as a series
# of 1s and 0s:
print $film->contacts_row_1, "\n";
print $film->contacts_row_2, "\n";
DESCRIPTION
This class represents a roll of 35mm film, and allows you to compute
the DX encoding contacts used by film cameras that automatically detect
film speed, the number of exposures and the exposure tolerance of the
film (most cameras actually use only the film speed for the DX
encoding).
CONSTRUCTOR
my $film = Photography::DX->new;
In addition the attributes documented below you may pass into the
constructor:
contacts_row_1
The first row of contacts on the roll of film. The speed will be
computed from this value.
contacts_row_2
The second row of contacts on the roll of film. The length and
tolerance will be computed from this value.
ATTRIBUTES
speed
The film speed. Must be a legal ISO arithmetic value between 25 and
5000. Defaults to ISO 100.
Special values 1-8 denote "custom" values.
length
The length of the film in 32x24mm exposures. Must be one of undef
(denotes "other"), 12, 20, 24, 36, 48, 60, 72.
tolerance
The exposure latitude of the film. Must be one of:
0.5 for ±0.5 stop
1 for ±1 stop
2 for +2 to -1 stops
3 for +3 to -1 stops
METHODS
contacts
my($row1, $row2) = $film->contacts;
Returns both rows of contacts.
contacts_row_1
Returns the contact layout as a string of 1s and 0s for the first row
of electrical contacts. 1 represents a metal contact, 0 represents the
lack of metal.
contacts_row_2
Returns the contact layout as a string of 1s and 0s for the second row
of electrical contacts. 1 represents a metal contact, 0 represents the
lack of metal.
is_custom_speed
Returns true if the film speed is a custom film speed.
logarithmic_speed
Returns the ISO logarithmic scale speed of the film (also known as
DIN).
CAVEATS
In digital photography, DX also refers to Nikon's crop sensor format
DSLRs.
DX encoding was introduced in 1980, well after the development of 35mm
film and so many types of film do not include DX codes.
This module uses features in and requires Perl 5.22.
SEE ALSO
Photography::EV
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DX_encoding
AUTHOR
Graham Ollis <plicease@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2015 by Graham Ollis.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.