3.3

Table Of Contents
Chapter 10 Working with Metadata 181
To view the sharing status of a photo
If you’ve shared photos with your Flickr and Facebook accounts, you can view the status of a
photo using the Info inspector. If you downloaded the photo from one of your Flickr or Facebook
accounts, the Info inspector displays which account the photo was downloaded from. If you
published the photo from Aperture to one of your accounts online, the Info inspector displays
the specic Facebook album or Flickr set the photo was published to and when it was published.
1 In the Browser, select a photo.
2 In the Info inspector or the Info pane of the Inspector HUD, choose Sharing from the Metadata
View pop-up menu.
If the photo is shared online, the Info inspector displays either the account it was downloaded
from or the specic account and album or set it was published to, along with when it was
published. The Info inspector also indicates if the photo has not been shared.
To view and reply to comments that friends post about your Facebook photos
If you’ve created Facebook albums in Aperture and shared photos from your Aperture library
with your Facebook account, you can use the Info inspector to view comments posted about
the photos by your friends. Aperture makes it easy to reply to comments that appear in the Info
inspector or add your own by opening the appropriate page in your web browser.
1 In the Browser, select a photo shared with Facebook.
2 In the Info inspector or the Info pane of the Inspector HUD, choose Sharing from the Metadata
View pop-up menu.
Comments posted about the selected photo by your friends on Facebook appear in the
Info inspector.
3 To reply to a comment, click it.
Your Internet browser opens to the Facebook page the photo is posted on. You can post your
reply directly in your Facebook account.
Working with the AutoFill Editor
As you enter metadata in the Info inspector’s elds, Aperture checks for previous entries, and if it
locates a match, it completes the entry for you. For example, if you used the keyword Landscape
previously, and you type the rst few letters of Landscape again, Aperture automatically
enters Landscape in the eld. You can set up and change the list of metadata that Aperture
automatically enters using the AutoFill Editor. You can enter up to 20 entries for a eld type. If
you’ve made a spelling mistake when typing an entry, you can also use the AutoFill Editor to
correct the mistake so that Aperture suggests the correct spelling.