Render Timer? [solved]
3Diva
Posts: 11,981
Is there a way to find out exactly how long a render took?
I'm needed exact render times for a product I'm working on but don't want to have to sit and watch the "Elapsed Time" until the render is done. Is there someplace that I can find the render time after a render is finished?
Edit: Found it. Help >> Troubleshooting >> hold down control and click: View File Log
Post edited by 3Diva on

Comments
It's in the log file.
It'll be in the log, the same one they ask you for when you write a trouble ticket. Just remember to get the time before doing other activities in DAZ so it will be easy to find towards the bottom of the log.
They've never asked me for a log when I've put in a help ticket. But I found it. :) Thank you!
Thank you!
I thought that there must be some place that it records it. I remembered where to go in Daz but it took me a while to remember that just going to Help >> Troubleshooting >> View File Log doesn't really do anything. Strange that you have to hold down control when clicking on the "View File Log" to get it to actually do anything. lol
Thanks for the help! :)
Log file should get opened in notepad just by LMB or I guess maybe you have osX instead.
I don't know what osX is, is that Windows 10? That's what I have. :)
And yeah, I could click on "View File Log" until the cows come home and absolutely nothing happens. But the log finally pops up if you hold down control when you click it.
When it opens Ctrl-a selects everything but more importantly takes you to the end of the file, scroll up from there until you find the render time.
What I do then is select the line with the time on it, copy it, open the .jpg render file in IrfanView, click on Information and at the bottom of the pop up window is a button for Comment, click to open and paste the copy into that window and save. Doing that means you will always have the time for any render to hand by looking at the Comment. I use it to put other things like lighting settings, environment settings, what is used in the render, etc.. It is very handy when doing test renders as you don't need to remember which settings were changed as they are all saved with the .jpg
I've not heard of IrfanView, I'll have to look into that. :) Thank you for the great suggestions! That kind of info can be pretty helpful, particularly (as you said) when doing test renders. :)
In Windows 10, if you just need to check the time without copying it, hover the mouse pointer over the DS icon on the taskbar, then when the small DS window icon shows up, move the mouse pointer over the window, and the status window for the latest render will show up:
Irfanview is a great little free image viewer/editor with surprisingly robust features. It can do all sorts of basic editing, but for me the best feature it has is the ability to do batch resize/conversion of multiple files at once. When I render I run them at a stupidly large resolution, then when I'm ready to start posting them I just open one of the .PNG files in irfanview, pull up the batch conversion utility and set it to convert to .JPG and resize them all down to the resolution I want, all at the same time. You can even tell it where to put the new files, and rename all of them as well if you want to. It's a major time saver for me. Plus it's hands down the best image viewer I've ever come accross for browsing through a image collection.
In the batch action you can also add a watermark overlay image to all the selected images at the same time.
@Divamakeup "Strange that you have to hold down control when clicking on the "View File Log" to get it to actually do anything. lolThanks for the help! :)"
Doesn't work that way for me (Win7). Staight click on the menu item, like everything else.
About using IrfanView, I included it in my Map Transfer tutorial and have some step-by-step instructions for batch conversions here. If anyone is interested.
Perhaps it's a Windows 10 thing.
@dragotx @Fishtails @L'Adair Thank you guys for the info on IrfanView. It sounds like a really helpful program. I just downloaded and installed it. :)
Nope - I have windows 10 and I don't need to do more than click on the log to get it to open.
Don't forget to download the plugins too.
Whelp, I guess my PC must be special then...
The log doesn't open for me without holding down Control and clicking it.
Thank you. Where can I find the plugins? :)
The Plugins button is below the Download one.
http://www.irfanview.com/
Oh I missed that! lol Thank you, Fishtales. :)
Thanks