

The first column would have to be the full path to the source file. Date wouldn't be necessary, unless you need to change the date. The first row would have to be "SourceFile,XMP:GPSLongitude,XMP:GPSLatitude". XMP gps tags will take negative coordinates, but EXIF gps tags only accept positive numbers and need the directional reference tag to be accurate.įirst off, there would have to be some changes to CSV. I could also create a batch script to use Exiftool from the command line, which I can probably figure out on my own in due time but to someone who doesn't deal with EXIF data regularly, the sheer number of tags, command-line arguments and options available in Exiftool is a bit daunting.ĮxifTool could do this, but the use of negative coordinates might make it a two step procedure depending upon what tags you want to use. I've found the Exiftool GUI, which has the ability to copy metadata from an XMP file to the appropriate JPG, but I don't know how to get my table into a set of XMP files in order to take advantage of that. Obviously, I could edit the EXIF metadata manually and copy and paste each set of coordinates into the appropriate EXIF tags, but I was hoping to find a way to do it automatically.
