phpman > perldoc > Image::ExifTool

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NAME
    Image::ExifTool - Read and write meta information

SYNOPSIS
      use Image::ExifTool qw(:Public);

      # ---- Simple procedural usage ----

      # Get hash of meta information tag names/values from an image
      $info = ImageInfo('a.jpg');

      # ---- Object-oriented usage ----

      # Create a new Image::ExifTool object
      $exifTool = new Image::ExifTool;

      # Extract meta information from an image
      $exifTool->ExtractInfo($file, \%options);

      # Get list of tags in the order they were found in the file
      @tagList = $exifTool->GetFoundTags('File');

      # Get the value of a specified tag
      $value = $exifTool->GetValue($tag, $type);

      # Get a tag description
      $description = $exifTool->GetDescription($tag);

      # Get the group name associated with this tag
      $group = $exifTool->GetGroup($tag, $family);

      # Set a new value for a tag
      $exifTool->SetNewValue($tag, $newValue);

      # Write new meta information to a file
      $success = $exifTool->WriteInfo($srcfile, $dstfile);

      # ...plus a host of other useful methods...

DESCRIPTION
    Reads and writes meta information in a wide variety of files, including the maker notes of many
    digital cameras by various manufacturers such as Canon, Casio, DJI, FLIR, FujiFilm, GE, GoPro,
    HP, JVC/Victor, Kodak, Leaf, Minolta/Konica-Minolta, Nikon, Nintendo, Olympus/Epson,
    Panasonic/Leica, Pentax/Asahi, Phase One, Reconyx, Ricoh, Samsung, Sanyo, Sigma/Foveon and Sony.

    Below is a list of file types and meta information formats currently supported by ExifTool (r =
    read, w = write, c = create):

      File Types
      ------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+------------
      360   r/w   | DR4   r/w/c | JNG   r/w   | O     r     | RAW   r/w
      3FR   r     | DSS   r     | JP2   r/w   | ODP   r     | RIFF  r
      3G2   r/w   | DV    r     | JPEG  r/w   | ODS   r     | RSRC  r
      3GP   r/w   | DVB   r/w   | JSON  r     | ODT   r     | RTF   r
      A     r     | DVR-MS r    | JXL   r     | OFR   r     | RW2   r/w
      AA    r     | DYLIB r     | K25   r     | OGG   r     | RWL   r/w
      AAE   r     | EIP   r     | KDC   r     | OGV   r     | RWZ   r
      AAX   r/w   | EPS   r/w   | KEY   r     | ONP   r     | RM    r
      ACR   r     | EPUB  r     | LA    r     | OPUS  r     | SEQ   r
      AFM   r     | ERF   r/w   | LFP   r     | ORF   r/w   | SKETCH r
      AI    r/w   | EXE   r     | LIF   r     | ORI   r/w   | SO    r
      AIFF  r     | EXIF  r/w/c | LNK   r     | OTF   r     | SR2   r/w
      APE   r     | EXR   r     | LRV   r/w   | PAC   r     | SRF   r
      ARQ   r/w   | EXV   r/w/c | M2TS  r     | PAGES r     | SRW   r/w
      ARW   r/w   | F4A/V r/w   | M4A/V r/w   | PBM   r/w   | SVG   r
      ASF   r     | FFF   r/w   | MACOS r     | PCD   r     | SWF   r
      AVI   r     | FITS  r     | MAX   r     | PCX   r     | THM   r/w
      AVIF  r/w   | FLA   r     | MEF   r/w   | PDB   r     | TIFF  r/w
      AZW   r     | FLAC  r     | MIE   r/w/  | PDF   r/w   | TORRENT r
      BMP   r     | FLIF  r/w   | MIFF  r   c | PEF   r/w   | TTC   r
      BPG   r     | FLV   r     | MKA   r     | PFA   r     | TTF   r
      BTF   r     | FPF   r     | MKS   r     | PFB   r     | TXT   r
      CHM   r     | FPX   r     | MKV   r     | PFM   r     | VCF   r
      COS   r     | GIF   r/w   | MNG   r/w   | PGF   r     | VRD   r/w/c
      CR2   r/w   | GPR   r/w   | MOBI  r     | PGM   r/w   | VSD   r
      CR3   r/w   | GZ    r     | MODD  r     | PLIST r     | WAV   r
      CRM   r/w   | HDP   r/w   | MOI   r     | PICT  r     | WDP   r/w
      CRW   r/w   | HDR   r     | MOS   r/w   | PMP   r     | WEBP  r
      CS1   r/w   | HEIC  r/w   | MOV   r/w   | PNG   r/w   | WEBM  r
      CSV   r     | HEIF  r/w   | MP3   r     | PPM   r/w   | WMA   r
      CZI   r     | HTML  r     | MP4   r/w   | PPT   r     | WMV   r
      DCM   r     | ICC   r/w/c | MPC   r     | PPTX  r     | WTV   r
      DCP   r/w   | ICS   r     | MPG   r     | PS    r/w   | WV    r
      DCR   r     | IDML  r     | MPO   r/w   | PSB   r/w   | X3F   r/w
      DFONT r     | IIQ   r/w   | MQV   r/w   | PSD   r/w   | XCF   r
      DIVX  r     | IND   r/w   | MRC   r     | PSP   r     | XLS   r
      DJVU  r     | INSP  r/w   | MRW   r/w   | QTIF  r/w   | XLSX  r
      DLL   r     | INSV  r     | MXF   r     | R3D   r     | XMP   r/w/c
      DNG   r/w   | INX   r     | NEF   r/w   | RA    r     | ZIP   r
      DOC   r     | ISO   r     | NKSC  r/w   | RAF   r/w   |
      DOCX  r     | ITC   r     | NRW   r/w   | RAM   r     |
      DPX   r     | J2C   r     | NUMBERS r   | RAR   r     |

      Meta Information
      ----------------------+----------------------+---------------------
      EXIF           r/w/c  |  CIFF           r/w  |  Ricoh RMETA    r
      GPS            r/w/c  |  AFCP           r/w  |  Picture Info   r
      IPTC           r/w/c  |  Kodak Meta     r/w  |  Adobe APP14    r
      XMP            r/w/c  |  FotoStation    r/w  |  MPF            r
      MakerNotes     r/w/c  |  PhotoMechanic  r/w  |  Stim           r
      Photoshop IRB  r/w/c  |  JPEG 2000      r    |  DPX            r
      ICC Profile    r/w/c  |  DICOM          r    |  APE            r
      MIE            r/w/c  |  Flash          r    |  Vorbis         r
      JFIF           r/w/c  |  FlashPix       r    |  SPIFF          r
      Ducky APP12    r/w/c  |  QuickTime      r    |  DjVu           r
      PDF            r/w/c  |  Matroska       r    |  M2TS           r
      PNG            r/w/c  |  MXF            r    |  PE/COFF        r
      Canon VRD      r/w/c  |  PrintIM        r    |  AVCHD          r
      Nikon Capture  r/w/c  |  FLAC           r    |  ZIP            r
      GeoTIFF        r/w/c  |  ID3            r    |  (and more)

CONFIGURATION
    User-defined tags can be added via the ExifTool configuration file, or by defining the
    %Image::ExifTool::UserDefined hash before calling any ExifTool methods. See "ExifTool_config" in
    the ExifTool distribution for more details.

    By default ExifTool looks for a configuration file named ".ExifTool_config" first in your home
    directory, then in the directory of the application script, but a different directory may be
    specified by setting the EXIFTOOL_HOME environment variable, or a different file may be
    specified by setting the ExifTool "configFile" variable before using Image::ExifTool. For
    example:

        BEGIN { $Image::ExifTool::configFile = '/Users/phil/myconfig.cfg' }
        use Image::ExifTool;

    The configuration feature may also be disabled by setting "configFile" to an empty string:

        BEGIN { $Image::ExifTool::configFile = '' }
        use Image::ExifTool;

EXPORTS
    Exports nothing by default, but "ImageInfo" and all static methods may be exported with the
    ":Public" export list.

METHODS
    All ExifTool features are accessed through the methods of the public interface listed below.
    Other Image::ExifTool methods and modules should not be accessed directly because their
    interface may change with future versions.

    None of these methods should ever die or issue warnings to STDERR if called with the proper
    arguments (with the exception of "SetNewValue" which may send an error message to STDERR, but
    only when called in scalar context). Error and warning messages that occur during processing are
    stored in the values of the Error and Warning tags, and are accessible via the "GetValue" method
    to retrieve a single Error or Warning message, or "GetInfo" to retrieve any number of them.

    The ExifTool methods are not thread safe.

  new
    Creates a new ExifTool object.

        $exifTool = new Image::ExifTool;

    One ExifTool object may be used to process many files, so creating multiple ExifTool objects
    usually is not necessary.

    Note that ExifTool uses AUTOLOAD to load non-member methods, so any class using Image::ExifTool
    as a base class must define an AUTOLOAD which calls Image::ExifTool::DoAutoLoad(). eg)

        sub AUTOLOAD
        {
            Image::ExifTool::DoAutoLoad($AUTOLOAD, @_);
        }

  ImageInfo
    Read image file and return meta information. This is the one step function for retrieving meta
    information from an image. Internally, "ImageInfo" calls "ExtractInfo" to extract the
    information, "GetInfo" to generate the information hash, and "GetTagList" for the returned tag
    list.

        # return meta information for 2 tags only (procedural)
        $info = ImageInfo($filename, $tag1, $tag2);

        # return information about an open image file (object-oriented)
        $info = $exifTool->ImageInfo(\*FILE);

        # return information from image data in memory for specified tags
        %options = (PrintConv => 0);
        @tagList = qw(filename imagesize xmp:creator exif:* -ifd1:*);
        $info = ImageInfo(\$imageData, \@tagList, \%options);

        # extract information from an embedded thumbnail image
        $info = ImageInfo('image.jpg', 'thumbnailimage');
        $thumbInfo = ImageInfo($$info{ThumbnailImage});

    Inputs:
        "ImageInfo" is very flexible about the input arguments, and interprets them based on their
        type. It may be called with one or more arguments. The one required argument is either a
        SCALAR (the image file name), a file reference (a reference to the image file) or a SCALAR
        reference (a reference to the image in memory). Other arguments are optional. The order of
        the arguments is not significant, except that the first SCALAR is taken to be the file name
        unless a file reference or scalar reference comes earlier in the argument list.

        Below is an explanation of how the "ImageInfo" function arguments are interpreted:

        ExifTool ref
            "ImageInfo" may be called with an ExifTool object if desired. Advantages of using the
            object-oriented form are that options may be set before calling "ImageInfo", and the
            object may be used afterward to access member functions. Must be the first argument if
            used.

        SCALAR
            The first scalar argument is taken to be the file name unless an earlier argument
            specified the image data via a file reference (file ref) or data reference (SCALAR ref).
            The remaining scalar arguments are names of tags for requested information. All tags are
            returned if no tags are specified.

            Tag names are case-insensitive and may be prefixed by optional group names separated by
            colons. A group name may begin with a family number (eg. '1IPTC:Keywords'), to restrict
            matches to a specific family. In the tag name, a '?' matches any single character and a
            '*' matches zero or more characters. Thus 'GROUP:*' represents all tags in a specific
            group. Wildcards may not be used in group names, with the exception that a group name of
            '*' may be used to extract all available instances of a tag regardless of the
            "Duplicates" setting (eg. '*:WhiteBalance'). Multiple groups may be specified (eg.
            'EXIF:Time:*' extracts all EXIF Time tags). And finally, a leading '-' indicates a tag
            to be excluded (eg. '-IFD1:*'), or a trailing '#' causes the ValueConv value to be
            returned for this tag.

            Note that keys in the returned information hash and elements of the returned tag list
            are not necessarily the same as these tag names because group names are removed, the
            case may be changed, and an instance number may be added. For this reason it is best to
            use either the keys of the returned hash or the elements of the returned tag list when
            accessing the tag values.

            See Image::ExifTool::TagNames for a complete list of ExifTool tag names.

        File ref
            A reference to an open image file. If you use this method (or a SCALAR reference) to
            access information in an image, the FileName and Directory tags will not be returned.
            (Also, a number of the File System tags will not be returned unless it is a plain file.)
            Image processing begins at the current file position, and on return the file position is
            unspecified. May be either a standard filehandle, or a reference to a File::RandomAccess
            object. Note that the file remains open and must be closed by the caller after
            "ImageInfo" returns.

            [Advanced: To allow a non-rewindable stream (eg. a network socket) to be re-read after
            processing with ExifTool, first wrap the file reference in a File::RandomAccess object,
            then pass this object to "ImageInfo". The File::RandomAccess object will buffer the file
            if necessary, and may be used to re-read the file after "ImageInfo" returns.]

        SCALAR ref
            A reference to image data in memory.

        ARRAY ref
            Reference to a list of tag names. On entry, any elements in the list are added to the
            list of requested tags. Tags with names beginning with '-' are excluded. On return, this
            list is updated to contain an ordered list of tag keys for the returned information.

            There will be 1:1 correspondence between the requested tags and the returned tag keys
            only if the "Duplicates" option is 0 and "Sort" is 'Input'. (With "Duplicates" enabled,
            there may be more entries in the returned list of tag keys, and with other "Sort"
            settings the entries may not be in the same order as requested.) If a requested tag
            doesn't exist, a tag key is still generated, but the tag value is undefined.

        HASH ref
            Reference to a hash containing the options settings valid for this call only. See
            "Options" documentation below for a list of available options. Options specified as
            arguments to "ImageInfo" take precedence over "Options" settings.

    Return Values:
        "ImageInfo" returns a reference to a hash of tag-key/value pairs. The tag keys are
        identifiers -- essentially case-sensitive tag names with an appended instance number if
        multiple tags with the same name were extracted from the image. Many of the ExifTool
        functions require a tag key as an argument. Use "GetTagName [static]" to get the tag name
        for a given tag key. Note that the case of the tag names may not be the same as requested.
        Here is a simple example to print out the information returned by "ImageInfo":

            foreach (sort keys %$info) {
                print "$_ => $$info{$_}\n";
            }

        Values of the returned hash are usually simple scalars, but a scalar reference is used to
        indicate binary data and an array reference may be used to indicate a list. Also, a hash
        reference may be returned if the "Struct" option is used. Lists of values are joined by
        commas into a single string only if the PrintConv option is enabled and the ListJoin option
        is enabled (which are the defaults). Note that binary values are not necessarily extracted
        unless specifically requested, or the Binary option is enabled and the tag is not
        specifically excluded. If not extracted the value is a reference to a string of the form
        "Binary data ##### bytes".

        The code below gives an example of how to handle these return values, as well as
        illustrating the use of other ExifTool functions:

            use Image::ExifTool;
            my $exifTool = new Image::ExifTool;
            $exifTool->Options(Unknown => 1);
            my $info = $exifTool->ImageInfo('a.jpg');
            my $group = '';
            my $tag;
            foreach $tag ($exifTool->GetFoundTags('Group0')) {
                if ($group ne $exifTool->GetGroup($tag)) {
                    $group = $exifTool->GetGroup($tag);
                    print "---- $group ----\n";
                }
                my $val = $info->{$tag};
                if (ref $val eq 'SCALAR') {
                    if ($$val =~ /^Binary data/) {
                        $val = "($$val)";
                    } else {
                        my $len = length($$val);
                        $val = "(Binary data $len bytes)";
                    }
                }
                printf("%-32s : %s\n", $exifTool->GetDescription($tag), $val);
            }

    Notes:
        ExifTool returns all values as byte strings of encoded characters. Perl wide characters are
        not used. See "CHARACTER ENCODINGS" for details about the encodings. By default, most
        returned values are encoded in UTF-8. For these, Encode::decode_utf8() may be used to
        convert to a sequence of logical Perl characters.

        As well as tags representing information extracted from the image, the following Extra tags
        generated by ExifTool may be returned:

            ExifToolVersion - The ExifTool version number.

            Error - An error message if the image could not be processed.

            Warning - A warning message if problems were encountered while
                      processing the image.

  Options
    Get/set ExifTool options. This function can be called to set the default options for an ExifTool
    object. Options set this way are in effect for all function calls but may be overridden by
    options passed as arguments to some functions. Option names are not case sensitive.

    The default option values may be changed by defining a %Image::ExifTool::UserDefined::Options
    hash. See the ExifTool_config file in the full ExifTool distribution for examples. A default of
    undef has the same behaviour as a value of 0 for numerical options.

        # exclude the 'OwnerName' tag from returned information
        $exifTool->Options(Exclude => 'OwnerName');

        # only get information in EXIF or MakerNotes groups
        $exifTool->Options(Group0 => ['EXIF', 'MakerNotes']);

        # ignore information from IFD1
        $exifTool->Options(Group1 => '-IFD1');

        # sort by groups in family 2, and extract unknown tags
        $exifTool->Options(Sort => 'Group2', Unknown => 1);

        # reset DateFormat option
        $exifTool->Options(DateFormat => undef);

        # do not extract duplicate tag names
        $oldSetting = $exifTool->Options(Duplicates => 0);

        # get current Verbose setting
        $isVerbose = $exifTool->Options('Verbose');

        # set a user parameter
        $exifTool->Options(UserParam => 'MyParam=some value');

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1) Option parameter name (case-insensitive)

        2) [optional] Option parameter value (may be undef to clear option)

        3-N) [optional] Additional parameter/value pairs

    Option Parameters:
        Note that these API options may also be used in the exiftool application via the
        command-line -api option.

        Binary
            Flag to extract the value data for all binary tags. Tag values representing large binary
            data blocks (eg. ThumbnailImage) are not necessarily extracted unless this option is set
            or the tag is specifically requested by name. Default is undef.

        BlockExtract
            Flag to extract some directories (mentioned in the ExifTool tag name documentation) as a
            block. Setting this to a value of 2 also prevents parsing the block to extract tags
            contained within.

        ByteOrder
            The byte order for newly created EXIF segments when writing. Note that if EXIF
            information already exists, the existing order is maintained. Valid values are 'MM',
            'II' and undef. If ByteOrder is not defined (the default), then the maker note byte
            order is used (if they are being copied), otherwise big-endian ('MM') order is assumed.
            This can also be set via the ExifByteOrder tag, but the ByteOrder option takes
            precedence if both are set.

        Charset
            Character set for encoding character tag values passed to/from ExifTool with code points
            above U+007F. Default is 'UTF8'. Valid values are listed below, case is not significant:

              Value        Alias(es)        Description
              -----------  ---------------  ----------------------------------
              UTF8         cp65001, UTF-8   UTF-8 characters
              Latin        cp1252, Latin1   Windows Latin1 (West European)
              Latin2       cp1250           Windows Latin2 (Central European)
              Cyrillic     cp1251, Russian  Windows Cyrillic
              Greek        cp1253           Windows Greek
              Turkish      cp1254           Windows Turkish
              Hebrew       cp1255           Windows Hebrew
              Arabic       cp1256           Windows Arabic
              Baltic       cp1257           Windows Baltic
              Vietnam      cp1258           Windows Vietnamese
              Thai         cp874            Windows Thai
              DOSLatinUS   cp437            DOS Latin US
              DOSLatin1    cp850            DOS Latin1
              DOSCyrillic  cp866            DOS Cyrillic
              MacRoman     cp10000, Roman   Macintosh Roman
              MacLatin2    cp10029          Macintosh Latin2 (Central Europe)
              MacCyrillic  cp10007          Macintosh Cyrillic
              MacGreek     cp10006          Macintosh Greek
              MacTurkish   cp10081          Macintosh Turkish
              MacRomanian  cp10010          Macintosh Romanian
              MacIceland   cp10079          Macintosh Icelandic
              MacCroatian  cp10082          Macintosh Croatian

            Note that this option affects some types of information when reading/writing the file
            and other types when getting/setting tag values, so it must be defined for both types of
            access. See the "CHARACTER ENCODINGS" section for more information about the handling of
            special characters.

        CharsetEXIF
            Internal encoding to use for stored EXIF "ASCII" string values. May also be set to undef
            to pass through EXIF "ASCII" values without recoding. Set to "UTF8" to conform with the
            MWG recommendation. Default is undef.

        CharsetFileName
            External character set used for file names passed to ExifTool functions. When set in
            Windows, this triggers use of Windows wide-character i/o library routines (requires
            Win32API::File). Default is undef. May also be set to an empty string to avoid "encoding
            not specified" warnings on Windows.

        CharsetID3
            Internal encoding to assume for ID3v1 strings. By the specification ID3v1 strings should
            be encoded in ISO 8859-1 (essentially Latin), but some applications may use local
            encoding instead. Default is 'Latin'.

        CharsetIPTC
            Fallback internal IPTC character set to assume if IPTC information contains no
            CodedCharacterSet tag. Possible values are the same as the "Charset" option. Default is
            'Latin'.

            Note that this option affects some types of information when reading/writing the file
            and other types when getting/setting tag values, so it must be defined for both types of
            access.

        CharsetPhotoshop
            Internal encoding to assume for Photoshop IRB resource names. Default is 'Latin'.

        CharsetQuickTime
            Internal encoding to assume for QuickTime strings stored with an unspecified encoding.
            Default is 'MacRoman'.

        CharsetRIFF
            Internal encoding to assume for strings in RIFF metadata (eg. AVI and WAV files). The
            default value of 0 assumes "Latin" encoding unless otherwise specified by the RIFF CSET
            chunk. Set to undef to pass through strings without recoding. Default is 0.

        Compact
            Comma-delimited list of settings for writing compact XMP. Below is a list of available
            settings. Note that 'NoPadding' effects only embedded XMP since padding is never written
            for stand-alone XMP files. Also note that 'OneDesc' is not recommended when writing XMP
            larger than 64 kB to a JPG file because it interferes with ExifTool's technique of
            splitting off large rdf:Description elements into the extended XMP. Case is not
            significant for any of these options. Aliases are given in brackets. Default is undef.

              NoPadding - Avoid 2 kB of recommended padding at end of XMP (NoPad)
              NoIndent  - No spaces to indent lines (NoSpace, NoSpaces)
              NoNewline - Avoid unnecessary newlines (NoNewlines)
              Shorthand - Use XMP Shorthand format
              OneDesc   - Combine properties into a single rdf:Description (OneDescr)
              AllSpace  - Equivalent to 'NoPadding,NoIndent,NoNewline'
              AllFormat - Equivalent to 'Shorthand,OneDesc'
              All       - Equivalent to 'AllSpace,AllFormat'

        Composite
            Flag to generate Composite tags when extracting information. Default is 1.

        Compress
            Flag to write new values in compressed format if possible. Has no effect unless
            Compress::Zlib is installed. Default is undef.

        CoordFormat
            Format for printing GPS coordinates. This is a printf format string with specifiers for
            degrees, minutes and seconds in that order, however minutes and seconds may be omitted.
            If the hemisphere is known, a reference direction (N, S, E or W) is appended to each
            printed coordinate, but adding a "+" to the first format specifier (eg. "%+.6f") prints
            a signed coordinate instead. For example, the following table gives the output for the
            same coordinate using various formats:

                  CoordFormat        Example Output
              -------------------  ------------------
              q{%d deg %d' %.2f"}  54 deg 59' 22.80"  (default for reading)
              q{%d %d %.8f}        54 59 22.80000000  (default for copying)
              q{%d deg %.4f min}   54 deg 59.3800 min
              q{%.6f degrees}      54.989667 degrees

            Note: To avoid loss of precision, the default coordinate format is different when
            copying tags with "SetNewValuesFromFile".

        DateFormat
            Format for printing date/time values. See "strftime" in the POSIX package and
            <https://exiftool.org/filename.html#codes> for details about the format string. If the
            date can not be converted, the value is left unchanged unless the StrictDate option is
            set. Timezones are ignored. The inverse conversion (ie. when calling "SetNewValue") is
            performed only if POSIX::strptime or Time::Piece is installed. The default setting of
            undef causes date/time values to remain in standard EXIF format (similar to a DateFormat
            of "%Y:%m:%d %H:%M:%S").

        Duplicates
            Flag to return values from tags with duplicate names when extracting information.
            Default is 1.

        Escape
            Escape special characters in extracted values for HTML or XML. Also unescapes HTML or
            XML character entities in input values passed to "SetNewValue". Valid settings are
            'HTML', 'XML' or undef. Default is undef.

        Exclude
            Exclude specified tags from tags extracted from an image. The option value is either a
            tag name or reference to a list of tag names to exclude. The case of tag names is not
            significant. This option is ignored for specifically requested tags. Tags may also be
            excluded by preceding their name with a '-' in the arguments to "ImageInfo".

        ExtendedXMP
            This setting affects the reading and editing of extended XMP in JPEG images. According
            to the XMP specification, extended XMP is only valid if it has the GUID specified by the
            HasExtendedXMP tag, so by default ExifTool will ignore other extended XMP, but this
            option allows full control over the extended XMP to be extracted.

                 0   - Ignore all extended XMP
                 1   - Read extended XMP with valid GUID only (default)
                 2   - Read extended XMP with any GUID
              <guid> - Read extended XMP with a specific GUID

        ExtractEmbedded
            Flag to extract information from embedded documents in EPS files, embedded EPS
            information and JPEG and Jpeg2000 images in PDF files, embedded MPF images in JPEG and
            MPO files, timed metadata in videos, and the resource fork of Mac OS files. A setting of
            2 also causes the H264 video stream in MP4 files to be parsed until the first SEI
            message is decoded, or 3 to parse the entire H264 stream in MP4 videos and the entire
            M2TS file to look for any unlisted program containing GPS metadata. Default is undef.

        FastScan
            Flag to increase speed when reading files by avoiding extraction of some types of
            metadata. With this option set to 1, ExifTool will not scan to the end of a JPEG image
            to check for an AFCP, CanonVRD, FotoStation, PhotoMechanic, MIE or PreviewImage trailer.
            This also stops the parsing after the first comment in GIF images, and at the
            audio/video data of RIFF-format files (AVI, WAV, etc), so any trailing metadata (eg. XMP
            written by some utilities) may be missed. Also disables input buffering for some types
            of files to reduce memory usage when reading from a non-seekable stream, and bypasses
            CRC validation for speed when writing PNG files. When combined with the ScanForXMP
            option, prevents scanning for XMP in recognized file types. With a value of 2, ExifTool
            will also avoid extracting any EXIF MakerNote information, and will stop parsing at the
            IDAT chunk of PNG images. (By the PNG specification, metadata is allowed after IDAT, but
            ExifTool always writes it before because some utilities will ignore it otherwise.) When
            set to 3 or higher, only pseudo system tags and FileType are generated. For 3, the file
            header is read to provide an educated guess at FileType. For 4, the file is not read at
            all and FileType is determined based on the file's extension. For 5, generation of
            Composite tags is also disabled (like setting "Composite" to 0). Default is undef.

        Filter
            Perl expression used to filter values for all tags. The expression acts on the value of
            the Perl default variable ($_), and changes the value of this variable as required. The
            current ExifTool object may be accessed through $self. The value is not changed if $_ is
            set to undef. List items are filtered individually. Applies to all returned values
            unless PrintConv option is disabled.

        FilterW
            Perl expression used to filter PrintConv values when writing. The expression acts on the
            value of the Perl default variable ($_), and changes the value of this variable as
            required. The current ExifTool object may be accessed through $self. The tag is not
            written if $_ is set to undef.

        FixBase
            Fix maker notes base offset. A common problem with image editing software is that
            offsets in the maker notes are not adjusted properly when the file is modified. This may
            cause the wrong values to be extracted for some maker note entries when reading the
            edited file. FixBase specifies an integer value to be added to the maker notes base
            offset. It may also be set to the empty string ('') for ExifTool will take its best
            guess at the correct base, or undef (the default) for no base adjustment.

        GeoMaxIntSecs
            Maximum interpolation time in seconds for geotagging. Geotagging is treated as an
            extrapolation if the Geotime value lies between two fixes in the same track which are
            separated by a number of seconds greater than this. Otherwise, the coordinates are
            calculated as a linear interpolation between the nearest fixes on either side of the
            Geotime value. Set to 0 to disable interpolation and use the coordinates of the nearest
            fix instead (provided it is within GeoMaxExtSecs, otherwise geotagging fails). Default
            is 1800.

        GeoMaxExtSecs
            Maximum extrapolation time in seconds for geotagging. Geotagging fails if the Geotime
            value lies outside a GPS track by a number of seconds greater than this. Otherwise, for
            an extrapolation the coordinates of the nearest fix are taken (ie. it is assumed that
            you weren't moving during this period). Default is 1800.

        GeoMaxHDOP
            Maximum Horizontal (2D) Dilution Of Precision for geotagging. GPS fixes are ignored if
            the HDOP is greater than this. Default is undef.

        GeoMaxPDOP
            Maximum Position (3D) Dilution Of Precision for geotagging. GPS fixes are ignored if the
            PDOP is greater than this. Default is undef.

        GeoMinSats
            Minimum number of satellites for geotagging. GPS fixes are ignored if the number of
            acquired satellites is less than this. Default is undef.

        GeoSpeedRef
            Reference units for writing GPSSpeed when geotagging:

                'K', 'k' or 'km/h'  - km/h
                'M', 'm' or 'mph'   - mph
                <anything else>     - knots (default undef)

        GlobalTimeShift
            Time shift to apply to all extracted date/time PrintConv values. Does not affect
            ValueConv values. Value is a date/time shift string (see Image::ExifTool::Shift(3pm)),
            with a leading '-' for negative shifts. Default is undef.

        Group#
            Extract tags only for specified groups in family # (Group0 assumed if # not given). The
            option value may be a single group name or a reference to a list of groups. Case is
            significant in group names. Specify a group to be excluded by preceding group name with
            a '-'. See "GetGroup" for a description of group families, and "GetAllGroups [static]"
            for lists of group names.

        HexTagIDs
            Return hexadecimal instead of decimal for the family 7 group names of tags with
            numerical ID's.

        HtmlDump
            Dump information in hex to dynamic HTML web page. The value may be 0-3 for increasingly
            larger limits on the maximum block size. Default is 0. Output goes to the file specified
            by the TextOut option (\*STDOUT by default).

        HtmlDumpBase
            Base for HTML dump offsets. If not defined, the EXIF/TIFF base offset is used. Set to 0
            for absolute offsets. Default is undef.

        IgnoreMinorErrors
            Flag to ignore minor errors. Causes minor errors to be downgraded to warnings, and minor
            warnings to be ignored. This option is provided mainly to allow writing of files when
            minor errors occur, but by ignoring some minor warnings the behaviour of ExifTool may be
            changed to allow some questionable operations to proceed (such as extracting thumbnail
            and preview images even if they don't have a recognizable header). Minor errors and
            warnings are denoted by "[minor]" at the start of the message, or "[Minor]" (with a
            capital "M") for warnings that affect processing when ignored.

        Lang
            Localized language for exiftool tag descriptions, etc. Available languages are given by
            the Image::ExifTool::Lang module names (eg. 'fr', 'zh_cn'). If the specified language
            isn't available, the option is not changed. May be set to undef to select the built-in
            default language. Default is 'en'.

        LargeFileSupport
            Flag to indicate that 64-bit file offsets are supported on this system. Default is
            undef.

        ListItem
            Return only a specific item from list-type values. A value of 0 returns the first item
            in the list, 1 return the second item, etc. Negative indices may also be used, with -1
            representing the last item in the list. Applies only to the top-level list of nested
            lists. Default is undef to return all items in the list.

        ListJoin
            Separator used to join the PrintConv value of multi-item List-type tags into a single
            string. If not defined, multi-item lists are returned as a list reference. Does not
            affect ValueConv values. Default is ', '.

        ListSplit
            Regular expression used to split values of list-type tags into individual items when
            writing. (eg. use ',\\s*' to split a comma-separated list.) Split when writing either
            PrintConv or ValueConv values. Default is undef.

        MakerNotes
            Option to extract MakerNotes and other writable subdirectories (such as PrintIM) as a
            data block. Normally when the MakerNotes are extracted they are rebuilt to include data
            outside the boundaries of the original maker note data block, but a value of 2 disables
            this feature. Possible values are:

              0 - Do not extract writable subdirectories (same as default of undef)
              1 - Extract and rebuild maker notes into self-contained block
              2 - Extract without rebuilding maker notes

        MDItemTags
            Flag to extract the OS X metadata item tags (see the "mdls" man page and "MacOS MDItem
            Tags" in Image::ExifTool::TagNames for more information).

        MissingTagValue
            Value for missing tags in tag name expressions (or tags where the advanced formatting
            expression returns undef). If not set, a minor error is issued for missing values, or
            the value is set to '' if "IgnoreMinorErrors" is set. Default is undef.

        NoMultiExif
            Raise error when attempting to write multi-segment EXIF in a JPEG image. Default is
            undef.

        NoPDFList
            Flag to avoid splitting PDF list-type tag values into separate items. Default is undef.

        Password
            Password for reading/writing password-protected PDF documents. Ignored if a password is
            not required. Character encoding of the password is determined by the value of the
            Charset option at processing time. Default is undef.

        PrintConv
            Flag to enable automatic print conversion. Also enables inverse print conversion for
            writing. Default is 1.

        QuickTimeHandler
            Flag set to add an 'mdir' Handler to a newly created Meta box when adding QuickTime
            ItemList tags. Adobe Bridge does not add this Handler, but it is commonly found in
            samples from other software, and it has been reported that Apple QuickTime Player and
            Photos.apps will ignore ItemList tags if this is missing. Default is 1.

        QuickTimePad
            Flag to preserve the padding of some QuickTime atoms when writing. QuickTime-based Canon
            CR3 files pad the values of container atoms with null bytes. This padding is removed by
            default when the file is rewritten, but setting this option to 1 adds padding to
            preserve the original atom size if the new atom would be smaller than the original.
            Default is undef.

        QuickTimeUTC
            Flag set to assume that QuickTime date/time values are stored as UTC, causing conversion
            to local time when they are extracted and from local time when written. According to the
            QuickTime specification date/time values should be UTC, but many digital cameras store
            local time instead (presumably because they don't know the time zone), so the default is
            to not convert these times (except for Canon CR3 files, which always use UTC times).
            This option also disables the autodetection of incorrect time-zero offsets in QuickTime
            date/time values, and enforces a time zero of 1904 as per the QuickTime specification.

        RequestAll
            Flag to request all tags to be extracted. This causes some tags to be generated which
            normally would not be unless specifically requested (by passing the tag name to
            "ImageInfo" or "ExtractInfo"). May be set to 2 or 3 to enable generation of some
            additional tags as mentioned in the tag name documentation. Default is undef.

        RequestTags
            List of additional tag and/or group names to request in the next call to "ExtractInfo".
            This option is useful only for tags/groups which aren't extracted unless specifically
            requested. Value may be a list reference, a delimited string of names (any delimiter is
            allowed), or undef to clear the current RequestTags list. Groups are requested by adding
            a colon after the name (eg. "MacOS:"). Names are converted to lower case as they are
            added to the list. Default is undef.

        SaveFormat
            Flag to save EXIF/TIFF format type as the family 6 group name when extracting
            information. Without this option set, the family 6 group names are not generated.
            Default is undef. See the "GetGroup" option for more details.

        SavePath
            Flag to save the metadata path as the family 5 group name when extracting information.
            Without this option set, the family 5 group names are not generated. Default is undef.
            See the "GetGroup" option for more details.

        ScanForXMP
            Flag to scan all files (even unrecognized formats) for XMP information unless XMP was
            already found in the file. When combined with the FastScan option, only unrecognized
            file types are scanned for XMP. Default is undef.

        Sort
            Specifies order to sort tags in returned list:

              Input  - Sort in same order as input tag arguments (default)
              File   - Sort in order that tags were found in the file
              Tag    - Sort alphabetically by tag name
              Descr  - Sort by tag description (for current Lang setting)
              Group# - Sort by tag group, where # is zero or more family
                       numbers separated by colons. If # is not specified,
                       Group0 is assumed.  See GetGroup for a description
                       of group families.

        Sort2
            Secondary sort order used for tags within each group when Sort is 'Group':

              File   - Sort in order tags were found in the file (default)
              Tag    - Sort alphabetically by tag name
              Descr  - Sort by tag description (for current Lang setting)

        StrictDate
            Flag to return undefined value for any date which can't be converted when the DateFormat
            option is used. Default is undef.

              undef - Same as 0 for reading/writing, or 1 for copying
                0   - Return date/time value unchanged if it can't be converted
                1   - Return undef if date/time value can't be converted

            When set to 1 while writing a PrintConv date/time value with the DateFormat option set,
            the value is written only if POSIX::strptime or Time::Piece is available and can
            successfully convert the value.

            For PNG CreationTime, a setting of 1 has the additional effect of causing the date/time
            to be reformatted according to PNG 1.2 recommendation (RFC-1123) when writing, and a
            warning to be issued for any non-standard value when reading (but note that Windows may
            not recognize PNG date/time values in standard format).

        Struct
            Flag to return XMP structures as hash references instead of flattening into individual
            tags. Has no effect when writing since both flattened and structured tags may always be
            written. Possible values are:

              undef - (default) Same as 0 for reading, 2 for copying
                0   - Read/copy flattened tags
                1   - Read/copy structured tags
                2   - Read/copy both flattened and structured tags, but flag
                      flattened tags as 'unsafe' for copying

        SystemTags
            Flag to extract the following additional File System tags: FileAttributes,
            FileDeviceNumber, FileInodeNumber, FileHardLinks, FileUserID, FileGroupID, FileDeviceID,
            FileBlockSize and FileBlockCount.

        TextOut
            Output file reference for Verbose and HtmlDump options. Default is \*STDOUT.

        TimeZone
            Time zone for local date/time values. May be set to any valid TZ string. Uses the system
            time zone if not specified. Default is undef. (Requires POSIX::tzset, which may not be
            available in Windows. A work-around in Windows is to "set TZ=<zone>" before running
            ExifTool.)

        Unknown
            Flag to get the values of unknown tags. If set to 1, unknown tags are extracted from
            EXIF (or other tagged-format) directories. If set to 2, unknown tags are also extracted
            from binary data blocks. Default is 0.

        UserParam
            Special option to set/get user-defined parameters. Useful to allow external input into
            tag name expressions and ValueConv logic. Valid UserParam values are:

              PARAM         - Get parameter
              PARAM=        - Clear parameter
              PARAM^=       - Set parameter to empty string
              PARAM=VALUE   - Set parameter
              <hash ref>    - Set entire UserParam hash lookup
              undef         - Clear all user parameters

            Where *PARAM* is the user-defined parameter name (case insensitive).

            User-defined parameters may be accessed in tag name expressions by prefixing the
            parameter name with a dollar sign just like normal tags, or via the API by calling
            "Options('UserParam','PARAM')". Appending a hash tag ("#") to the parameter name also
            causes the parameter to be extracted as a normal tag (in the UserParam group). If called
            without additional arguments, "Options('UserParam')" returns a reference to the hash of
            all user parameters (with lower-case names).

        Validate
            Flag to perform extra validation metadata checks when reading, causing extra warnings to
            be generated if problems are found. Default is undef.

        Verbose
            Print verbose messages to file specified by TextOut option. Value may be from 0 to 5 for
            increasingly verbose messages. Default is 0. With the verbose option set, messages are
            printed to the console as the file is parsed. Level 1 prints the tag names and raw
            values. Level 2 adds more details about the tags. Level 3 adds a hex dump of the tag
            data, but with limits on the number of bytes dumped. Levels 4 and 5 remove the dump
            limit on tag values and JPEG segment data respectively.

        WriteMode
            Set tag write/create mode. Value is a string of one or more characters from list below.
            Default is 'wcg'.

                w - Write existing tags
                c - Create new tags
                g - create new Groups as necessary

            The level of the group differs for different types of metadata. For XMP or IPTC this is
            the full XMP/IPTC block (the family 0 group), but for EXIF this is the individual IFD
            (the family 1 group). The 'w' and 'c' modes are tested only when "SetNewValue" is
            called, but the 'g' mode is also tested in "WriteInfo".

        XAttrTags
            Flag to extract the OS X extended attribute tags (see the "xattr" man page and "MacOS
            XAttr Tags" in Image::ExifTool::TagNames for more information).

        XMPAutoConv
            Flag to enable automatic conversion for unknown XMP tags with values that look like
            rational numbers or dates. Default is 1.

    Return Values:
        The original value of the last specified parameter.

  ClearOptions
    Reset all options to their default values. Loads user-defined default option values from the
    %Image::ExifTool::UserDefined::Options hash in the .ExifTool_config file if it exists.

        $exifTool->ClearOptions();

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

    Return Values:
        (none)

  ExtractInfo
    Extract all meta information from an image.

        $success = $exifTool->ExtractInfo('image.jpg', \%options);

    Inputs:
        "ExtractInfo" takes exactly the same arguments as "ImageInfo". The only difference is that a
        list of tag keys is not returned if an ARRAY reference is given. The following options are
        effective in the call to "ExtractInfo":

        Binary, Charset, CharsetEXIF, CharsetFileName, CharsetID3, CharsetIPTC, CharsetPhotoshop,
        CharsetQuickTime, CharsetRIFF, Composite, ExtendedXMP, ExtractEmbedded, FastScan, FixBase,
        HtmlDump, HtmlDumpBase, IgnoreMinorErrors, Lang, LargeFileSupport, MakerNotes, MDItemTags,
        NoPDFList, Password, QuickTimeUTC (enforced 1904 time zero), RequestAll, RequestTags,
        SaveFormat, SavePath, ScanForXMP, Struct, TextOut, Unknown, Verbose, XAttrTags and
        XMPAutoConv.

    Return Value:
        1 if this was a recognized file format, 0 otherwise (and 'Error' tag set).

  GetInfo
    "GetInfo" is called to return meta information after it has been extracted from the image by a
    previous call to "ExtractInfo" or "ImageInfo". This function may be called repeatedly after a
    single call to "ExtractInfo" or "ImageInfo".

        # get image width and height only
        $info = $exifTool->GetInfo('ImageWidth', 'ImageHeight');

        # get all Error and Warning messages
        $info = $exifTool->GetInfo('Error', 'Warning');

        # get information for all tags in list (list updated with tags found)
        $info = $exifTool->GetInfo(\@ioTagList);

        # get all information in Author or Location groups
        $info = $exifTool->GetInfo({Group2 => ['Author', 'Location']});

    Inputs:
        Inputs are the same as "ExtractInfo" and "ImageInfo" except that an image can not be
        specified. Options in effect are:

        Charset, CoordFormat, DateFormat, Duplicates, Escape, Exclude, Filter, Group#,
        GlobalTimeShift, Lang, ListItem, ListJoin, PrintConv, Sort (if a tag list reference is
        given) and StrictDate.

    Return Value:
        Reference to information hash, the same as with "ImageInfo".

    The following options are effective in the call to "GetInfo":

    Charset, CoordFormat, DateFormat, Duplicates, Escape, Exclude, Filter, Group#, GlobalTimeShift,
    Lang, ListItem, ListJoin, PrintConv, QuickTimeUTC (conversion to local time), Sort (if a tag
    list reference is given) and StrictDate.

  WriteInfo
    Write meta information to a file. The specified source file is rewritten to the same-type
    destination file with new information as specified by previous calls to "SetNewValue". The
    necessary segments and/or directories are created in the destination file as required to store
    the specified information. May be called repeatedly to write the same information to additional
    files without the need to call "SetNewValue" again.

    ExifTool queues all new values that are assigned via calls to "SetNewValue", then applies them
    to any number of files through one or more calls to "WriteInfo". These queued values may be
    accessed through "GetNewValue", and are completely separate from metadata extracted from files
    via "ExtractInfo" or "ImageInfo" and accessed through "GetInfo" or "GetValue".

    To be clear, it is NOT necessary to call "ExtractInfo" or "ImageInfo" before "WriteInfo".
    "WriteInfo" changes only metadata specified by previous calls to "SetNewValue".

        # add information to a source file, writing output to new file
        $exifTool->WriteInfo($srcfile, $dstfile);

        # create XMP data file from scratch
        $exifTool->WriteInfo(undef, $dstfile, 'XMP');

        # overwrite file (you do have backups, right?)
        $exifTool->WriteInfo($srcfile);

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1) Source file name, file reference, scalar reference, or undef to create a file from
        scratch. A reference to a File::RandomAccess object is also allowed as a source, but in this
        case the destination is not optional.

        2) [optional] Destination file name, file reference, scalar reference to write to memory, or
        undef to overwrite the original file. May be '-' to write to stdout.

        3) [optional] Destination file type. Ignored if a source is defined.

    Return Value:
        1 if file was written OK, 2 if file was written but no changes made, 0 on file write error.

        If an error code is returned, an Error tag is set and GetValue('Error') can be called to
        obtain the error description. A Warning tag may be set even if this routine is successful.
        Calling WriteInfo clears any pre-existing Error and Warning tags.

            $errorMessage = $exifTool->GetValue('Error');
            $warningMessage = $exifTool->GetValue('Warning');

    Notes:
        The source file name may be undefined to create a file from scratch (currently only XMP,
        MIE, ICC, VRD, DR4, EXV and EXIF files can be created in this way -- see "CanCreate" for
        details). If undefined, the destination file type is required unless the type can be
        determined from the extension of the destination file name.

        If a destination file name is given, the specified file must not exist because an existing
        destination file will not be overwritten. Any new values for FileName, Directory or HardLink
        are ignored when a destination file name is specified.

        The destination file name may be undefined to overwrite the original file (make sure you
        have backups!). In this case, if a source file name is provided, a temporary file is created
        and renamed to replace the source file if no errors occurred while writing. Otherwise, if a
        source file reference or scalar reference is used, the image is first written to memory then
        copied back to replace the original if there were no errors.

        On Mac OS systems, the file resource fork is preserved if this routine is called with a
        source file name.

    The following ExifTool options are effective in the call to "WriteInfo":

    ByteOrder, Charset, CharsetEXIF, CharsetFileName, CharsetIPTC, Compact, Compress, FixBase,
    IgnoreMinorErrors, NoMultiExif, NoPDFList, Password, QuickTimeHandler, QuickTimePad, Verbose and
    WriteMode.

  GetTagList
    Get a sorted list of tags from the specified information hash or tag list.

        @tags = $exifTool->GetTagList($info, 'Group0');

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1) [optional] Information hash reference or tag list reference

        2) [optional] Sort order ('Input', 'File', 'Tag', 'Descr' or 'Group#')

        3) [optional] Secondary sort order ('File', 'Tag' or 'Descr')

        If the information hash or tag list reference is not provided, then the list of found tags
        from the last call to "ImageInfo", "ExtractInfo" or "GetInfo" is used instead, and the
        result is the same as if "GetFoundTags" was called. If sort order is not specified, the sort
        order is taken from the current options settings.

    Return Values:
        A list of tag keys in the specified order.

  GetFoundTags
    Get list of found tags in specified sort order. The found tags are the tags for the information
    obtained from the most recent call to "ImageInfo", "ExtractInfo" or "GetInfo" for this object.

        @tags = $exifTool->GetFoundTags('File');

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1) [optional] Sort order ('Input', 'File', 'Tag', 'Descr' or 'Group#')

        2) [optional] Secondary sort order ('File', 'Tag' or 'Descr')

        If sort order is not specified, the sort order from the ExifTool options is used.

    Return Values:
        A list of tag keys in the specified order.

  GetRequestedTags
    Get list of requested tags. These are the tags that were specified in the arguments of the most
    recent call to "ImageInfo", "ExtractInfo" or "GetInfo", including tags specified via a tag list
    reference. Shortcut tags are expanded in the list.

        @tags = $exifTool->GetRequestedTags();

    Inputs:
        (none)

    Return Values:
        List of requested tag keys in the same order that the tags were specified. Note that this
        list will be empty if tags were not specifically requested (ie. If extracting all tags).

  GetValue
    Get the value of a specified tag. The returned value is either the human-readable (PrintConv)
    value, the converted machine-readable (ValueConv) value, the original raw (Raw) value, or the
    original rational (Rational) value for rational formats. If the value type is not specified, the
    PrintConv value is returned if the PrintConv option is set, otherwise the ValueConv value is
    returned. The PrintConv values are same as the values returned by "ImageInfo" and "GetInfo" in
    the tag/value hash unless the PrintConv option is disabled.

    Tags which represent lists of multiple values (as may happen with 'Keywords' for example) are
    handled specially. In scalar context, the returned PrintConv value for these tags is either a
    string of values or a list reference (depending on the ListJoin option setting), and the
    ValueConv value is always a list reference. But in list context, "GetValue" always returns the
    list itself.

    Note that "GetValue" requires a case-sensitive tag key as an argument. To retrieve tag
    information based on a case-insensitive tag name (with an optional group specifier), use
    "GetInfo" instead.

        # PrintConv example
        my $val = $exifTool->GetValue($tag);
        if (ref $val eq 'SCALAR') {
            print "$tag = (unprintable value)\n";
        } else {
            print "$tag = $val\n";
        }

        # ValueConv examples
        my $val = $exifTool->GetValue($tag, 'ValueConv');
        if (ref $val eq 'ARRAY') {
            print "$tag is a list of values\n";
        } elsif (ref $val eq 'SCALAR') {
            print "$tag represents binary data\n";
        } else {
            print "$tag is a simple scalar\n";
        }

        my @keywords = $exifTool->GetValue('Keywords', 'ValueConv');

    The following options are in effect when "GetValue" is called:

    Charset, CoordFormat, DateFormat, Escape, Filter, GlobalTimeShift, Lang, ListItem, ListJoin,
    PrintConv, QuickTimeUTC (conversion to local time), StrictDate and TimeZone.

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1) Tag key, or case-sensitive tag name with optional group prefix(es)

        2) [optional] Value type: 'PrintConv', 'ValueConv', 'Both', 'Raw' or 'Rational'

        The default value type is 'PrintConv' if the PrintConv option is set, otherwise the default
        is 'ValueConv'. A value type of 'Both' returns both ValueConv and PrintConv values as a
        list. 'Rational' returns the raw rational value as a string fraction for rational types, or
        undef for other types.

    Return Values:
        The value of the specified tag. If the tag represents a list of multiple values and the
        ListJoin option is enabled then PrintConv returns a string of values, otherwise a reference
        to the list is returned in scalar context. The list itself is returned in list context.
        (Unless 'Both' values are requested, in which case two list references are returned,
        regardless of context.) Values may also be scalar references to binary data, or hash
        references if the "Struct" option is set.

        Note: It is possible for "GetValue" to return an undefined ValueConv or PrintConv value (or
        an empty list in list context) even if the tag exists, since it is possible for these
        conversions to yield undefined values. And the Rational value will be undefined for any
        non-rational tag. The Raw value should always exist if the tag exists.

  SetNewValue
    Set the new value for a tag. The routine may be called multiple times to set the values of many
    tags before using "WriteInfo" to write the new values to an image.

    For list-type tags (like Keywords), either call repeatedly with the same tag name for each
    value, or call with a reference to the list of values.

        # set a new value for a tag (errors go to STDERR)
        $success = $exifTool->SetNewValue($tag, $value);

        # set a new value and capture any error message
        ($success, $errStr) = $exifTool->SetNewValue($tag, $value);

        # delete information for specified tag if it exists in image
        # (also resets AddValue and DelValue options for this tag)
        $exifTool->SetNewValue($tag);

        # reset all values from previous calls to SetNewValue()
        $exifTool->SetNewValue();

        # delete a specific keyword
        $exifTool->SetNewValue('Keywords', $word, DelValue => 1);

        # set keywords (a list-type tag) with two new values
        $exifTool->SetNewValue(Keywords => 'word1');
        $exifTool->SetNewValue(Keywords => 'word2');
        # equivalent, but set both in one call using an array reference
        $exifTool->SetNewValue(Keywords => ['word1','word2']);

        # add a keyword without replacing existing keywords in the file
        $exifTool->SetNewValue(Keywords => $word, AddValue => 1);

        # conditionally add a tag if it didn't exist before,
        # or replace it if it had a specified value ("old value")
        $exifTool->SetNewValue(Description => '', DelValue => 1);
        $exifTool->SetNewValue(Description => 'old value', DelValue => 1);
        $exifTool->SetNewValue(Description => 'new value');

        # set a tag in a specific group
        $exifTool->SetNewValue(Headline => $val, Group => 'XMP');
        $exifTool->SetNewValue('XMP:Headline' => $val);  # (equivalent)

        # shift original date/time back by 2.5 hours
        $exifTool->SetNewValue(DateTimeOriginal => '2:30', Shift => -1);

        # write a tag only if it had a specific value
        # (the order of the following calls is not significant)
        $exifTool->SetNewValue(Title => $oldVal, DelValue => 1);
        $exifTool->SetNewValue(Title => $newVal);

        # write tag by numerical value
        $exifTool->SetNewValue(Orientation => 6, Type => 'ValueConv');
        $exifTool->SetNewValue('Orientation#' => 6);  # (equivalent)

        # delete all but EXIF tags
        $exifTool->SetNewValue('*');  # delete all...
        $exifTool->SetNewValue('EXIF:*', undef, Replace => 2); # ...but EXIF

        # write structured information as a HASH reference
        $exifTool->SetNewValue('XMP:Flash' => {
            mode   => 'on',
            fired  => 'true',
            return => 'not'
        });

        # write structured information as a serialized string
        $exifTool->SetNewValue('XMP:Flash'=>'{mode=on,fired=true,return=not}');

    (See <https://exiftool.org/struct.html#Serialize> for a description of the structure
    serialization technique.)

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1) [optional] Tag key or tag name, or undef to clear all new values. The tag name may be
        prefixed by one or more family 0, 1 or 2 group names with optional leading family numbers,
        separated by colons (eg. 'EXIF:Artist', 'XMP:Time:*'), which is equivalent to using a Group
        option argument. Also, a '#' may be appended to the tag name (eg. 'EXIF:Orientation#'), with
        the same effect as setting Type to 'ValueConv'. Wildcards ('*' and '?') may be used in the
        tag name to assign or delete multiple tags simultaneously. A tag name of '*' is special when
        deleting information, and will delete an entire group even if some individual tags in the
        group are not writable, but only if a single family 0 or 1 group is specified (otherwise the
        tags are deleted individually). Use "GetDeleteGroups" to get a list of deletable group
        names, and see Image::ExifTool::TagNames for a complete list of tag names.

        2) [optional] New value for tag. Undefined to delete tag from file. May be a scalar, scalar
        reference, list reference to set a list of values, or hash reference for a structure.
        Integer values may be specified as a hexadecimal string (with a leading '0x'), and simple
        rational values may be specified in fractional form (eg. '4/10'). Structure tags may be
        specified either as a hash reference or a serialized string (see the last two examples
        above).

        3-N) [optional] SetNewValue option/value pairs (see below).

    SetNewValue Options:

        AddValue
            Specifies that the value be added to an existing list in a file rather than overwriting
            the existing values. Valid settings are 0 (overwrite any existing tag value), 1 (add to
            an existing list and warn for non-list tags) or 2 (add to existing list and overwrite
            non-list tags). Default is 0.

        DelValue
            Delete existing tag from a file if it has the specified value. For list-type tags this
            deletes a specified item from the list. For non-list tags this may be used to
            conditionally replace a tag by providing a new value in a separate call to SetNewValue
            (see examples above). For structured tags, the entire structure is deleted/replaced only
            if all of the specified fields match the existing structure. Option values are 0 or 1.
            Default is 0.

        EditGroup
            Create tags in existing groups only. Don't create new group. Valid values are 0 and 1.
            Effectively removes the 'g' from the ExifTool WriteMode option for this tag only.
            Default is 0.

        EditOnly
            Edit tag only if it already exists. Don't create new tag. Valid values are 0 and 1.
            Effectively removes the 'c' from the ExifTool WriteMode option for this tag only.
            Default is 0.

        Group
            Specifies group name where tag should be written. This option is superseded by any group
            specified in the tag name. If not specified, tag is written to highest priority group as
            specified by "SetNewGroups". May be one or more family 0, 1 or 2 groups with optional
            leading family number, separated by colons. Case is not significant.

        NoFlat
            Treat flattened tags as 'unsafe'.

        NoShortcut
            Disables default behaviour of looking up tag in shortcuts if not found otherwise.

        Protected
            Bit mask for tag protection levels to write. Bit 0x01 allows writing of 'unsafe' tags
            (ie. tags not copied automatically via "SetNewValuesFromFile"). Bit 0x02 allows writing
            of 'protected' tags, and should only be used internally by ExifTool. See
            Image::ExifTool::TagNames, for a list of tag names indicating 'unsafe' and 'protected'
            tags. Default is 0.

        ProtectSaved
            Avoid setting new values which were saved after the Nth call to "SaveNewValues". Has no
            effect on unsaved values, or values saved before Nth call. Option value is N. Default is
            undef.

        Replace
            Flag to replace the previous new values for this tag (ie. replace the values set in
            previous calls to "SetNewValue"). This option is most commonly used to replace
            previously-set new values for list-type tags. Valid values are 0 (set new value normally
            -- adds to new values for list-type tags), 1 (reset any previous new values before
            setting new value) or 2 (reset previous new values only; new value argument is ignored).
            Default is 0.

        Shift
            Shift the tag by the specified value. Currently only date/time tags and tags with
            numerical values may be shifted. Undefined for no shift, 1 for a positive shift, or -1
            for a negative shift. A value of 0 causes a positive shift to be applied if the tag is
            shiftable and AddValue is set, or a negative shift for date/time tags only if DelValue
            is set. Default is undef. See Image::ExifTool::Shift(3pm) for more information.

        Type
            The type of value being set. Valid values are PrintConv, ValueConv or Raw. Default is
            PrintConv if the "PrintConv" Option is set, otherwise ValueConv.

    Return Values:
        In scalar context, returns the number of tags set and error messages are printed to STDERR.
        In list context, returns the number of tags set, and the error string (which is undefined if
        there was no error).

    Notes:
        When deleting groups of tags, the Replace option may be used to exclude specific groups from
        a mass delete. However, this technique may not be used to exclude individual tags from a
        group delete (unless a family 2 group was specified in the delete). Instead, use
        "SetNewValuesFromFile" to recover the values of individual tags after deleting a group.

        When deleting all tags from a JPEG image, the APP14 "Adobe" information is not deleted by
        default because doing so may affect the appearance of the image. However, this information
        may be deleted by specifying it explicitly, either by group (with 'Adobe:*') or as a block
        (with 'Adobe').

    The following ExifTool options are effective in the call to "SetNewValue":

    Charset, DateFormat, Escape, IgnoreMinorErrors, Lang, ListJoin, ListSplit, PrintConv,
    QuickTimeUTC, StrictDate, TimeZone, Verbose and WriteMode.

  GetNewValue
    Get the new Raw value for a tag. This is the value set by "SetNewValue" this is queued to be
    written to file. List-type tags may return multiple values in list context.

        $rawVal = $exifTool->GetNewValue($tag);

        @rawVals = $exifTool->GetNewValue($tag);

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1) Tag name (case sensitive, may be prefixed by family 0, 1 or 7 group names, separated by
        colons)

    Return Values:
        List of new Raw tag values, or first value in list when called in scalar context. The list
        may be empty either if the tag isn't being written, or if it is being deleted (ie. if
        "SetNewValue" was called without a value).

  SetNewValuesFromFile
    A very powerful routine that sets new values for tags from information found in a specified
    file.

        # set new values from all information in a file...
        my $info = $exifTool->SetNewValuesFromFile($srcFile);
        # ...then write these values to another image
        my $result = $exifTool->WriteInfo($file2, $outFile);

        # set all new values, preserving original groups
        $exifTool->SetNewValuesFromFile($srcFile, '*:*');

        # set specific information
        $exifTool->SetNewValuesFromFile($srcFile, @tags);

        # set new value from a different tag in specific group
        $exifTool->SetNewValuesFromFile($fp, 'XMP-dc:Subject<IPTC:Keywords');

        # add all IPTC keywords to XMP subject list
        $exifTool->SetNewValuesFromFile($fp, 'XMP-dc:Subject+<IPTC:Keywords');

        # set new value from an expression involving other tags
        $exifTool->SetNewValuesFromFile($file,
            'Comment<ISO=$ISO Aperture=$aperture Exposure=$shutterSpeed');

        # set keywords list from the values of multiple tags
        $exifTool->SetNewValuesFromFile($file, { Replace => 0 },
            'keywords<xmp:subject', 'keywords<filename');

        # copy all EXIF information, preserving the original IFD
        # (without '*.*<' tags would be copied to the preferred EXIF IFD)
        $exifTool->SetNewValuesFromFile($file, '*:*<EXIF:*');

        # copy all tags with names starting with "gps" (note: this is
        # different than "gps:*" because it will also copy XMP GPS tags)
        $exifTool->SetNewValuesFromFile($file, 'gps*');

        # set FileName from Model, translating questionable characters
        $exifTool->SetNewValuesFromFile($file,
            'filename<${model; tr(/\\\\?*:|"><)(_) }.jpg');

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1) File name, file reference, or scalar reference

        2-N) [optional] List of tag names to set or options hash references. All writable tags are
        set if none are specified. The tag names are not case sensitive, and may be prefixed by one
        or more family 0, 1, 2 or 7 group names with optional leading family numbers, separated by
        colons (eg. 'exif:iso'). A leading '-' indicates tags to be excluded (eg. '-comment'), or a
        trailing '#' causes the ValueConv value to be copied (same as setting the Type option to
        'ValueConv' for this tag only). Wildcards ('*' and '?') may be used in the tag name. A tag
        name of '*' is commonly used when a group is specified to copy all tags in the group (eg.
        'XMP:*'). A special feature allows tag names of the form 'DSTTAG<SRCTAG' (or
        'SRCTAG>DSTTAG') to be specified to copy information to a tag with a different name or a
        specified group. Both 'SRCTAG' and 'DSTTAG' may contain wildcards and/or be prefixed by a
        group name (eg. 'fileModifyDate<modifyDate' or 'xmp:*<*'), and/or suffixed by a '#' to
        disable print conversion. Copied tags may also be added or deleted from a list with
        arguments of the form 'DSTTAG+<SRCTAG' or 'DSTTAG-<SRCTAG'. Tags are evaluated in order, so
        exclusions apply only to tags included earlier in the list. An extension of this feature
        allows the tag value to be set from a string containing tag names with leading '$' symbols
        (eg. 'Comment<the file is $filename'). Braces '{}' may be used around the tag name to
        separate it from subsequent text, and a '$$' is used to to represent a '$' symbol. The
        behaviour for missing tags in expressions is defined by the "MissingTagValue" option. The
        tag value may be modified via changes to the default input variable ($_) in a Perl
        expression placed inside the braces and after a semicolon following the tag name (see the
        last example above). A '@' may be added after the tag name (before the semicolon) to make
        the expression act on individual list items instead of the concatenated string for list-type
        tags. Braces within the expression must be balanced. Multiple options hash references may be
        passed to set different options for different tags. Options apply to subsequent tags in the
        argument list.

        By default, this routine will commute information between same-named tags in different
        groups, allowing information to be translated between images with different formats. This
        behaviour may be modified by specifying a group name for extracted tags (even if '*' is used
        as a group name), in which case the information is written to the original group, unless
        redirected to a different group. When '*' is used for a group name, by default the family 1
        group of the original tag is preserved, but a different family may be specified with a
        leading family number. (For example, specifying '*:*' copies all information while
        preserving the original family 1 groups, while '0*:*' preserves the family 0 group.)

    SetNewValuesFromFile Options:
        The options are the same was for "SetNewValue", and are passed directly to "SetNewValue"
        internally, with a few exceptions:

        - The Replace option defaults to 1 instead of 0 as with "SetNewValue".

        - The AddValue or DelValue option is set for individual tags if '+>' or '->' (or '+<' or
        '-<') are used.

        - The Group option is set for tags where a group name is given.

        - The Protected flag is set to 1 for individually specified tags.

        - The Type option also applies to extracted tags.

    Return Values:
        A hash of information that was set successfully. May include Warning or Error entries if
        there were problems reading the input file.

    Notes:
        The PrintConv option applies to this routine, but it normally should be left on to provide
        more reliable transfer of information between groups.

        If a preview image exists, it is not copied. The preview image must be transferred
        separately if desired, in a separate call to "WriteInfo"

        When simply copying all information between files of the same type, it is usually desirable
        to preserve the original groups by specifying '*:*' for the tags to set.

        The "Duplicates" option is always in effect for tags extracted from the source file using
        this routine.

        The "Struct" option is enabled by default for tags extracted by this routine. This allows
        the hierarchy of complex structures to be preserved when copying, but the Struct option may
        be set to 0 to override this behaviour and copy as flattened tags instead.

  CountNewValues
    Return the total number of new values set.

        $numSet = $exifTool->CountNewValues();
        ($numSet, $numPseudo) = $exifTool->CountNewValues();

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

    Return Values:
        In scalar context, returns the total number of tags with new values set. In list context,
        also returns the number of "pseudo" tag values which have been set. "Pseudo" tags are tags
        like FileName and FileModifyDate which are not contained within the file and can be changed
        without rewriting the file.

  SaveNewValues
    Save state of new values to be later restored by "RestoreNewValues".

        $exifTool->SaveNewValues();         # save state of new values
        $exifTool->SetNewValue(ISO => 100); # set new value for ISO
        $exifTool->WriteInfo($src, $dst1);  # write ISO + previous new values
        $exifTool->RestoreNewValues();      # restore previous new values
        $exifTool->WriteInfo($src, $dst2);  # write previous new values only

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

    Return Value:
        Count of the number of times this routine has been called (N) since the last time the new
        values were reset.

  RestoreNewValues
    Restore new values to the settings that existed when "SaveNewValues" was last called. May be
    called repeatedly after a single call to "SaveNewValues". See "SaveNewValues" above for an
    example.

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

    Return Value:
        None.

  SetFileModifyDate
    Write the filesystem modification or creation time from the new value of the FileModifyDate or
    FileCreateDate tag.

        $exifTool->SetNewValue(FileModifyDate => '2000:01:02 03:04:05-05:00',
                               Protected => 1);
        $result = $exifTool->SetFileModifyDate($file);

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1) File name

        2) [optional] Base time if applying shift (days before $^T)

        3) [optional] Tag to write: 'FileModifyDate' (default), or 'FileCreateDate'

    Return Value:
        1 if the time was changed, 0 if nothing was done, or -1 if there was an error setting the
        time.

    Notes:
        Equivalent to, but more efficient than calling "WriteInfo" when only the FileModifyDate or
        FileCreateDate tag has been set. If a timezone is not specified, local time is assumed. When
        shifting, the time of the original file is used unless the optional base time is specified.

        The ability to write FileCreateDate is currently restricted to Windows systems only.

  SetFileName
    Set the file name and directory, or create a hard link. If not specified, the new file name is
    derived from the new values of the FileName and Directory tags, or from the HardLink or SymLink
    tag if creating a link. If the FileName tag contains a '/', then the file is renamed into a new
    directory. If FileName ends with '/', then it is taken as a directory name and the file is moved
    into the new directory. The new value for the Directory tag takes precedence over any directory
    specified in FileName.

        $result = $exifTool->SetFileName($file);
        $result = $exifTool->SetFileName($file, $newName);

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1) Current file name

        2) [optional] New file name

        3) [optional] 'HardLink' or 'SymLink' to create a hard or symbolic link instead of renaming
        the file, or 'Test' to test renaming feature by printing the old and new names instead of
        changing anything.

    Return Value:
        1 on success, 0 if nothing was done, or -1 if there was an error renaming the file or
        creating the link.

    Notes:
        Will not overwrite existing files. New directories are created as necessary. If the file is
        successfully renamed, the new file name may be accessed via $$exifTool{NewName}.

  SetNewGroups
    Set the order of the preferred groups when adding new information. In subsequent calls to
    "SetNewValue", new information will be created in the first valid group of this list. This has
    an impact only if the group is not specified when calling "SetNewValue" and if the tag name
    exists in more than one group. The default order is EXIF, IPTC, XMP, MakerNotes, QuickTime,
    Photoshop, ICC_Profile, CanonVRD, Adobe. Any family 0 group name may be used. Case is not
    significant.

        $exifTool->SetNewGroups('XMP','EXIF','IPTC');

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1-N) Groups in order of priority. If no groups are specified, the priorities are reset to
        the defaults.

    Return Value:
        None.

  GetNewGroups
    Get current group priority list.

        @groups = $exifTool->GetNewGroups();

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

    Return Values:
        List of group names in order of write priority. Highest priority first.

  GetTagID
    Get the ID for the specified tag. The ID is the IFD tag number in EXIF information, the property
    name in XMP information, or the data offset in a binary data block. For some tags, such as
    Composite tags where there is no ID, an empty string is returned. In list context, also returns
    a language code for the tag if available and different from the default language (eg. with
    alternate language entries for XMP "lang-alt" tags).

        $id = $exifTool->GetTagID($tag);
        ($id, $lang) = $exifTool->GetTagID($tag);

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1) Tag key

    Return Values:
        In scalar context, returns the tag ID or '' if there is no ID for this tag. In list context,
        returns the tag ID (or '') and the language code (or undef).

  GetDescription
    Get description for specified tag. This function will always return a defined value. In the case
    where the description doesn't exist, one is generated from the tag name.

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1) Tag key

    Return Values:
        A description for the specified tag.

  GetGroup
    Get group name(s) for a specified tag.

        # return family 0 group name (eg. 'EXIF');
        $group = $exifTool->GetGroup($tag, 0);

        # return all groups (eg. qw{EXIF IFD0 Author Main})
        @groups = $exifTool->GetGroup($tag);

        # return groups as a string (eg. 'Main:IFD0:Author')
        $group = $exifTool->GetGroup($tag, ':3:1:2');

        # return groups as a simplified string (eg. 'IFD0:Author')
        $group = $exifTool->GetGroup($tag, '3:1:2');

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1) Tag key

        2) [optional] Group family number, or string of numbers separated by colons

    Return Values:
        Group name (or '' if tag has no group). If no group family is specified, "GetGroup" returns
        the name of the group in family 0 when called in scalar context, or the names of groups for
        all families in list context. Returns a string of group names separated by colons if the
        input group family contains a colon. The string is simplified to remove a leading 'Main:'
        and adjacent identical group names unless the family string begins with a colon.

    Notes:
        The group family numbers are currently available:

            0) Information Type         (eg. EXIF, XMP, IPTC)
            1) Specific Location        (eg. IFD0, XMP-dc)
            2) Category                 (eg. Author, Time)
            3) Document Number          (eg. Main, Doc1, Doc3-2)
            4) Instance Number          (eg. Copy1, Copy2, Copy3...)
            5) Metadata Path            (eg. JPEG-APP1-IFD0-ExifIFD)
            6) EXIF/TIFF Format         (eg. int8u, int32u, undef, string)
            7) Tag ID                   (eg. ID-271, ID-rights, ID-a9aut)

        Families 0 and 1 are based on the file structure, and are similar except that family 1 is
        more specific and sub-divides some groups to give more detail about the specific location
        where the information was found. For example, the EXIF group is split up based on the
        specific IFD (Image File Directory), the MakerNotes group is divided into groups for each
        manufacturer, and the XMP group is separated based on the XMP namespace prefix. Note that
        only common XMP namespaces are listed in the GetAllGroups documentation, but additional
        namespaces may be present in some XMP data. Also note that the 'XMP-xmp...' group names may
        appear in the older form 'XMP-xap...' since these names evolved as the XMP standard was
        developed. The ICC_Profile group is broken down to give information about the specific
        ICC_Profile tag from which multiple values were extracted. As well, information extracted
        from the ICC_Profile header is separated into the ICC-header group.

        Family 2 classifies information based on the logical category to which the information
        refers.

        Family 3 gives the document number for tags extracted from embedded documents, or 'Main' for
        tags from the main document. (See the "ExtractEmbedded" option for extracting tags from
        embedded documents.) Nested sub-documents (if they exist) are indicated by numbers separated
        with dashes in the group name, to an arbitrary depth. (eg. 'Doc2-3-1' is the 1st
        sub-sub-document of the 3rd sub-document of the 2nd embedded document of the main file.)
        Document numbers are also used to differentiate samples for timed metadata in videos.

        Family 4 provides a method for differentiating tags when multiple tags exist with the same
        name in the same location. The primary instance of a tag (the tag extracted when the
        Duplicates option is disabled and no group is specified) has no family 4 group name, but
        additional instances have family 4 group names of 'Copy1', 'Copy2', 'Copy3', etc. For
        convenience, the primary tag may also be accessed using a group name of 'Copy0'.

        Family 5 is experimental, and gives the complete path for the metadata in the file.
        Generated only if the "SavePath" option is used when extracting.

        Family 6 is currently used only for EXIF/TIFF metadata, and gives the format type of the
        extracted value. Generated only if the "SaveFormat" option is used when extracting.

        Family 7 is used for tag ID's. The group names are the actual tag ID's, with a leading "ID-"
        string. Non-numerical ID's have characters other than [-_A-Za-z0-9] converted to hex.
        Numerical tag ID's are returned in hex if the "HexTagIDs" option is set, otherwise decimal
        is used. When specifying a family 7 group name, numerical ID's may be in hex or decimal, and
        non-numerical ID's may or may not have characters other than [-_A-Za-z0-9] converted to hex.
        Note that unlike other group names, the tag ID's of family 7 group names are case sensitive
        (but the leading "ID-" is not).

        See "GetAllGroups [static]" for complete lists of group names.

  GetGroups
    Get list of group names that exist in the specified information.

        @groups = $exifTool->GetGroups($info, 2);
        @groups = $exifTool->GetGroups('3:1');

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

        1) [optional] Info hash ref (default is all extracted info)

        2) [optional] Group family number, or string of numbers (default 0)

    Return Values:
        List of group names in alphabetical order. If information hash is not specified, the group
        names are returned for all extracted information. See "GetGroup" for an description of
        family numbers and family number strings.

  BuildCompositeTags
    Builds composite tags from required tags. The composite tags are convenience tags which are
    derived from the values of other tags. This routine is called automatically by "ImageInfo" and
    "ExtractInfo" if the Composite option is set.

    Inputs:
        0) ExifTool object reference

    Return Values:
        (none)

    Notes:
        Tag values are calculated in alphabetical order unless a tag Require's or Desire's another
        composite tag, in which case the calculation is deferred until after the other tag is
        calculated.

        Composite tags may need to read data from the image for their value to be determined, and
        for these "BuildCompositeTags" must be called while the image is available. This is only a
        problem if "ImageInfo" is called with a filename (as opposed to a file reference or scalar
        reference) since in this case the file is closed before "ImageInfo" returns. Here the
        Composite option may be used so that "BuildCompositeTags" is called from within "ImageInfo",
        before the file is closed.

  GetTagName [static]
    Get name of tag from tag key. This is a convenience function that strips the embedded instance
    number, if it exists, from the tag key.

    Note: "static" in the heading above indicates that the function does not require an ExifTool
    object reference as the first argument. All functions documented below are also static.

        $tagName = Image::ExifTool::GetTagName($tag);

    Inputs:
        0) Tag key

    Return Value:
        Tag name. This is the same as the tag key but has the instance number removed.

  GetShortcuts [static]
    Get a list of shortcut tags.

    Inputs:
        (none)

    Return Values:
        List of shortcut tags (as defined in Image::ExifTool::Shortcuts).

  GetAllTags [static]
    Get list of all available tag names.

        @tagList = Image::ExifTool::GetAllTags($group);

    Inputs:
        0) [optional] Group name, or string of group names separated by colons

    Return Values:
        A list of all available tags in alphabetical order, or all tags in a specified group or
        intersection of groups. The group name is case insensitive, and any group in families 0-2
        may be used except for EXIF family 1 groups (ie. the specific IFD).

  GetWritableTags [static]
    Get list of all writable tag names.

        @tagList = Image::ExifTool::GetWritableTags($group);

    Inputs:
        0) [optional] Group name, or string of group names separated by colons

    Return Values:
        A list of all writable tags in alphabetical order. These are the tags for which values may
        be set through "SetNewValue". If a group name is given, returns only writable tags in
        specified group(s). The group name is case insensitive, and any group in families 0-2 may be
        used except for EXIF family 1 groups (ie. the specific IFD).

  GetAllGroups [static]
    Get list of all group names in specified family.

        @groupList = Image::ExifTool::GetAllGroups($family);

    Inputs:
        0) Group family number (0-7)

    Return Values:
        A list of all groups in the specified family in alphabetical order.

    Here is a complete list of groups for each of these families:

    Family 0 (Information Type):
        AFCP, AIFF, APE, APP0, APP1, APP11, APP12, APP13, APP14, APP15, APP3, APP4, APP5, APP6,
        APP8, ASF, Audible, CanonVRD, Composite, DICOM, DNG, DV, DjVu, Ducky, EXE, EXIF, ExifTool,
        FITS, FLAC, FLIR, File, Flash, FlashPix, Font, FotoStation, GIF, GIMP, GeoTiff, GoPro, H264,
        HTML, ICC_Profile, ID3, IPTC, ISO, ITC, JFIF, JPEG, JSON, JUMBF, Jpeg2000, LNK, Leaf, Lytro,
        M2TS, MIE, MIFF, MNG, MOI, MPC, MPEG, MPF, MXF, MakerNotes, Matroska, Meta, Ogg, OpenEXR,
        Opus, PDF, PICT, PLIST, PNG, PSP, Palm, Parrot, PanasonicRaw, PhotoCD, PhotoMechanic,
        Photoshop, PostScript, PrintIM, QuickTime, RAF, RIFF, RSRC, RTF, Radiance, Rawzor, Real,
        Red, SVG, SigmaRaw, Stim, Theora, Torrent, Trailer, UserParam, VCard, Vorbis, WTV, XML, XMP,
        ZIP

    Family 1 (Specific Location):
        AC3, AFCP, AIFF, APE, ASF, AVI1, Adobe, AdobeCM, AdobeDNG, Apple, Audible, CBOR, CIFF,
        CameraIFD, Canon, CanonCustom, CanonRaw, CanonVRD, Casio, Chapter#, Composite, DICOM, DJI,
        DNG, DV, DjVu, DjVu-Meta, Ducky, EPPIM, EXE, EXIF, ExifIFD, ExifTool, FITS, FLAC, FLIR,
        File, Flash, FlashPix, Font, FotoStation, FujiFilm, FujiIFD, GE, GIF, GIMP, GPS, GeoTiff,
        GlobParamIFD, GoPro, GraphConv, H264, HP, HTC, HTML, HTML-dc, HTML-ncc, HTML-office,
        HTML-prod, HTML-vw96, HTTP-equiv, ICC-chrm, ICC-clrt, ICC-header, ICC-meas, ICC-meta,
        ICC-view, ICC_Profile, ICC_Profile#, ID3, ID3v1, ID3v1_Enh, ID3v2_2, ID3v2_3, ID3v2_4, IFD0,
        IFD1, IPTC, IPTC#, ISO, ITC, Insta360, InteropIFD, ItemList, JFIF, JFXX, JPEG, JPEG-HDR,
        JPS, JSON, JUMBF, JVC, Jpeg2000, KDC_IFD, Keys, Kodak, KodakBordersIFD, KodakEffectsIFD,
        KodakIFD, KyoceraRaw, LNK, Leaf, LeafSubIFD, Leica, Lyrics3, Lytro, M2TS, MAC, MIE-Audio,
        MIE-Camera, MIE-Canon, MIE-Doc, MIE-Extender, MIE-Flash, MIE-GPS, MIE-Geo, MIE-Image,
        MIE-Lens, MIE-Main, MIE-MakerNotes, MIE-Meta, MIE-Orient, MIE-Preview, MIE-Thumbnail,
        MIE-UTM, MIE-Unknown, MIE-Video, MIFF, MNG, MOBI, MOI, MPC, MPEG, MPF0, MPImage, MS-DOC,
        MXF, MacOS, MakerNotes, MakerUnknown, Matroska, MediaJukebox, Meta, MetaIFD, Microsoft,
        Minolta, MinoltaRaw, Motorola, NITF, Nikon, NikonCapture, NikonCustom, NikonScan,
        NikonSettings, NineEdits, Nintendo, Ocad, Ogg, Olympus, OpenEXR, Opus, PDF, PICT, PNG,
        PNG-pHYs, PSP, Palm, Panasonic, PanasonicRaw, Pentax, PhaseOne, PhotoCD, PhotoMechanic,
        Photoshop, PictureInfo, PostScript, PreviewIFD, PrintIM, ProfileIFD, Qualcomm, QuickTime,
        RAF, RAF2, RIFF, RMETA, RSRC, RTF, Radiance, Rawzor, Real, Real-CONT, Real-MDPR, Real-PROP,
        Real-RA3, Real-RA4, Real-RA5, Real-RJMD, Reconyx, Red, Ricoh, SPIFF, SR2, SR2DataIFD,
        SR2SubIFD, SRF#, SVG, Samsung, Sanyo, Scalado, Sigma, SigmaRaw, Sony, SonyIDC, Stim, SubIFD,
        System, Theora, Torrent, Track#, UserData, UserParam, VCalendar, VCard, Version0, Vorbis,
        WTV, XML, XMP, XMP-DICOM, XMP-Device, XMP-GAudio, XMP-GDepth, XMP-GFocus, XMP-GImage,
        XMP-GPano, XMP-GSpherical, XMP-LImage, XMP-MP, XMP-MP1, XMP-PixelLive, XMP-aas, XMP-acdsee,
        XMP-album, XMP-apple-fi, XMP-aux, XMP-cc, XMP-cell, XMP-creatorAtom, XMP-crs, XMP-dc,
        XMP-dex, XMP-digiKam, XMP-drone-dji, XMP-dwc, XMP-exif, XMP-exifEX, XMP-expressionmedia,
        XMP-extensis, XMP-fpv, XMP-getty, XMP-ics, XMP-iptcCore, XMP-iptcExt, XMP-lr, XMP-mediapro,
        XMP-microsoft, XMP-mwg-coll, XMP-mwg-kw, XMP-mwg-rs, XMP-pdf, XMP-pdfx, XMP-photomech,
        XMP-photoshop, XMP-plus, XMP-pmi, XMP-prism, XMP-prl, XMP-prm, XMP-pur, XMP-rdf, XMP-swf,
        XMP-tiff, XMP-x, XMP-xmp, XMP-xmpBJ, XMP-xmpDM, XMP-xmpMM, XMP-xmpNote, XMP-xmpPLUS,
        XMP-xmpRights, XMP-xmpTPg, ZIP, iTunes

    Family 2 (Category):
        Audio, Author, Camera, Device, Document, ExifTool, Image, Location, Other, Preview,
        Printing, Time, Unknown, Video

    Family 3 (Document Number):
        Doc#, Main

    Family 4 (Instance Number):
        Copy#

    Family 5 (Metadata Path):
        eg. JPEG-APP1-IFD0-ExifIFD

    Family 6 (EXIF/TIFF Format):
        int8u, string, int16u, int32u, rational64u, int8s, undef, int16s, int32s, rational64s,
        float, double, ifd, unicode, complex, int64u, int64s, ifd64

    Family 7 (Tag ID):
        ID-xxx (Where xxx is the tag ID. Numerical ID's are returned in hex with a leading "0x" if
        the HexTagIDs option is set, or decimal otherwise. Characters in non-numerical ID's which
        are not valid in a group name are returned as 2 hex digits.)

    Note: This function may also be called as an ExifTool member function to allow the HexTagIDs
    option to be set when retrieving family 7 group names.

  GetDeleteGroups [static]
    Get list of all deletable group names.

        @delGroups = Image::ExifTool::GetDeleteGroups();

    Inputs:
        None.

    Return Values:
        A list of deletable group names in alphabetical order. The current list of deletable group
        names is:

        Adobe, AFCP, APP0, APP1, APP10, APP11, APP12, APP13, APP14, APP15, APP2, APP3, APP4, APP5,
        APP6, APP7, APP8, APP9, Audio, Author, Camera, CanonVRD, CIFF, Document, Ducky, EXIF,
        ExifIFD, ExifTool, File, FlashPix, FotoStation, GlobParamIFD, GPS, ICC_Profile, IFD0, IFD1,
        Image, Insta360, InteropIFD, IPTC, ItemList, JFIF, Jpeg2000, Keys, Location, MakerNotes,
        Meta, MetaIFD, Microsoft, MIE, MPF, NikonCapture, Other, PDF, PDF-update, PhotoMechanic,
        Photoshop, PNG, PNG-pHYs, Preview, PrintIM, Printing, QuickTime, RMETA, RSRC, SubIFD, Time,
        Trailer, UserData, Video, XML, XML-*, XMP, XMP-*

        To schedule a group for deletion, call "SetNewValue" with a tag name like 'EXIF:*' and an
        undefined tag value.

        Deleting a family 0 or 1 group will delete the entire corresponding block of metadata, but
        deleting a family 2 group (eg. Audio, Author, Camera, etc.) deletes the individual tags
        belonging to that category.

        The 'Trailer' group allows all trailers in JPEG and TIFF-format images to be deleted at
        once, including unknown trailers. Note that the JPEG "APP" groups are special, and are used
        only to delete application segments which are not associated with another deletable group.
        For example, deleting 'APP14:*' will delete other APP14 segments, but not the APP14 "Adobe"
        segment.

  GetFileType [static]
    Get type of file given file name.

        my $type = Image::ExifTool::GetFileType($filename);
        my $desc = Image::ExifTool::GetFileType($filename, 1);

    Inputs:
        0) [optional] File name (or just an extension)

        1) [optional] Flag to return a description instead of a type. Default is undef. Set to 0 to
        also return types of recognized but unsupported files (otherwise the return value for
        unsupported files is undef), or 1 to return descriptions.

    Return Value:
        A string, based on the file extension, which indicates the basic format of the file. Note
        that some files may be based on other formats (like many RAW image formats are based on
        TIFF). In list context, may return more than one file type if the file may be based on
        different formats. Returns undef if files with this extension are not yet supported by
        ExifTool. Returns a list of extensions for all supported file types if no input extension is
        specified (or all recognized file types if the description flag is set to 0). Returns a more
        detailed description of the specific file format when the description flag is set.

  CanWrite [static]
    Can the specified file be written?

        my $writable = Image::ExifTool::CanWrite($filename);

    Inputs:
        0) File name or extension

    Return Value:
        True if ExifTool supports writing files of this type (based on the file extension).

  CanCreate [static]
    Can the specified file be created?

        my $creatable = Image::ExifTool::CanCreate($filename);

    Inputs:
        0) File name or extension

    Return Value:
        True if ExifTool can create files with this extension from scratch. Currently, this can only
        be done with XMP, MIE, ICC, VRD, DR4, EXV and EXIF files.

  AddUserDefinedTags [static]
    Add user-defined tags to an existing tag table at run time. This differs from the usual
    technique of creating user-defined tags via the %Image::ExifTool::UserDefined hash (see the
    ExifTool_config file in the Image::ExifTool distribution) because it allows tags to be added
    after a tag table has been initialized.

        use Image::ExifTool ':Public';
        my %tags = (
            TestTagID1 => { Name => 'TestTagName1' },
            TestTagID2 => { Name => 'TestTagName2' },
        );
        my $num = AddUserDefinedTags('Image::ExifTool::PDF::Info', %tags);

    Inputs:
        0) Destination tag table name

        1-N) Pairs of tag ID / tag information hash references for the new tags

    Return Value:
        The number of tags added.

    Notes
        Pre-existing tags with the same ID will be replaced in the destination table. See
        lib/Image/ExifTool/README in the full distribution for full details on the elements of the
        tag information hash.

CHARACTER ENCODINGS
    Certain meta information formats allow coded character sets other than plain ASCII. When
    reading, most known encodings are converted to the external character set according to the
    "Charset" option, or to UTF-8 by default. When writing, the inverse conversions are performed.
    Alternatively, special characters may be converted to/from HTML character entities with the
    "Escape" HTML option.

    A distinction is made between the external character set visible via the ExifTool API, and the
    internal character used to store text in the metadata of a file. These character sets may be
    specified separately as follows:

    External Character Sets:
        The encoding for tag values passed to/from ExifTool API functions is set via the "Charset"
        option, which is 'UTF8' by default.

        The encoding of file names is specified via the "CharsetFileName" option. By default,
        "CharsetFileName" is not defined, and file names passed to ExifTool are used directly in
        calls to the system i/o routines (which expect UTF-8 strings on Mac/Linux, but default to
        the system code page on Windows). In this mode on Windows a warning is issued if a file name
        contains special characters, but this warning may be avoided by setting "CharsetFileName" to
        an empty string. Setting "CharsetFileName" to any other value causes file names to be
        converted from the specified encoding to one appropriate for the system. In Windows this
        also has the effect of activating Unicode filename support via the special Windows
        wide-character i/o routines if Win32API::File is available.

    Internal Character Sets:
        The encodings used to store strings in the various metadata formats. These encodings may be
        changed for certain types of metadata via the "CharsetEXIF", "CharsetID3", "CharsetIPTC",
        "CharsetPhotoshop", "CharsetQuickTime" and "CharsetRIFF" options.

    Values are returned as byte strings of encoded characters. Perl wide characters are not used. By
    default, most returned strings are encoded in UTF-8. For these, Encode::decode_utf8() may be
    used to convert to a sequence of logical Perl characters. Note that some settings of the
    PERL_UNICODE environment variable may be incompatible with ExifTool's character handling.

    More specific details are given below about how character coding is handled for EXIF, IPTC, XMP,
    PNG, ID3, PDF, Photoshop, QuickTime, AIFF, MIE and Vorbis information:

  EXIF
    Most textual information in EXIF is stored in ASCII format (called "string" in the ExifTool tag
    name documentation). By default ExifTool does not convert these strings. However, it is not
    uncommon for applications to write UTF-8 or other encodings where ASCII is expected. To deal
    with these, ExifTool allows the internal EXIF string encoding to be specified with
    "CharsetEXIF", which causes EXIF string values to be converted from the specified character set
    when reading, and stored with this character set when writing. (The MWG recommends using UTF-8
    encoding for EXIF strings, and in keeping with this the MWG module sets the default internal
    EXIF string encoding to UTF-8, but note that this will have no effect unless the external
    encoding is also set to something other than the default of UTF-8.)

    A few EXIF tags (UserComment, GPSProcessingMethod and GPSAreaInformation) support a designated
    internal text encoding, with values stored as ASCII, Unicode (UCS-2) or JIS. When reading these
    tags, ExifTool converts Unicode and JIS to the external character set specified by the "Charset"
    option, or to UTF-8 by default. ASCII text is not converted. When writing, text is stored as
    ASCII unless the string contains special characters, in which case it is converted from the
    external character set (UTF-8 by default), and stored as Unicode. ExifTool writes Unicode in
    native EXIF byte ordering by default, but the byte order may be specified by setting the
    ExifUnicodeByteOrder tag (see the Extra Tags documentation).

    The EXIF "XP" tags (XPTitle, XPComment, etc) are always stored as little-endian Unicode (UCS-2),
    and are read and written using the specified character set.

  IPTC
    The value of the IPTC:CodedCharacterSet tag determines how the internal IPTC string values are
    interpreted. If CodedCharacterSet exists and has a value of 'UTF8' (or 'ESC % G') then string
    values are assumed to be stored as UTF-8, otherwise Windows Latin1 (cp1252, 'Latin') coding is
    assumed by default, but this can be changed with the "CharsetIPTC" option. When reading, these
    strings are converted to the character set specified by the "Charset" option. When writing, the
    inverse conversions are performed. No conversion is done if the internal (IPTC) and external
    (ExifTool) character sets are the same. Note that ISO 2022 character set shifting is not
    supported. Instead, a warning is issued and the string is not converted if an ISO 2022 shift
    code is encountered. See <http://www.iptc.org/IIM/> for the official IPTC specification.

    ExifTool may be used to convert IPTC values to a different internal encoding. To do this, all
    IPTC tags must be rewritten along with the desired value of CodedCharacterSet. For example, the
    following command changes the internal IPTC encoding to UTF-8 (from Windows Latin1 unless
    CodedCharacterSet was already 'UTF8'):

      exiftool -tagsfromfile @ -iptc:all -codedcharacterset=utf8 a.jpg

    or from Windows Latin2 (cp1250) to UTF-8:

      exiftool -tagsfromfile @ -iptc:all -codedcharacterset=utf8 \
      -charset iptc=latin2 a.jpg

    and this command changes it back from UTF-8 to Windows Latin1 (cp1252):

      exiftool -tagsfromfile @ -iptc:all -codedcharacterset= a.jpg

    or to Windows Latin2:

      exiftool -tagsfromfile @ -iptc:all -codedcharacterset= \
      -charset iptc=latin2 a.jpg

    Unless CodedCharacterSet is 'UTF8', applications have no reliable way to determine the IPTC
    character encoding. For this reason, it is recommended that CodedCharacterSet be set to 'UTF8'
    when creating new IPTC.

    (Note: Here, "IPTC" Refers to the older IPTC IIM format. The more recent IPTC Core and Extension
    specifications actually use the XMP format.)

  XMP
    ExifTool reads XMP encoded as UTF-8, UTF-16 or UTF-32, and converts them all to UTF-8
    internally. Also, all XML character entity references and numeric character references are
    converted. When writing, ExifTool always encodes XMP as UTF-8, converting the following 5
    characters to XML character references: & < > ' ". By default no further conversion is
    performed, however if the "Charset" option is other than 'UTF8' then text is converted to/from
    the specified character set when reading/writing.

  PNG
    PNG TextualData tags are stored as tEXt, zTXt and iTXt chunks in PNG images. The tEXt and zTXt
    chunks use ISO 8859-1 encoding, while iTXt uses UTF-8. When reading, ExifTool converts all PNG
    textual data to the character set specified by the "Charset" option. When writing, ExifTool
    generates a tEXt chunk (or zTXt with the "Compress" option) if the text doesn't contain special
    characters or if Latin encoding is specified; otherwise an iTXt chunk is used and the text is
    converted from the specified character set and stored as UTF-8.

  JPEG Comment
    The encoding for the JPEG Comment (COM segment) is not specified, so ExifTool reads/writes this
    text without conversion.

  ID3
    The ID3v1 specification officially supports only ISO 8859-1 encoding (a subset of Windows
    Latin1), although some applications may incorrectly use other character sets. By default
    ExifTool converts ID3v1 text from Latin to the character set specified by the "Charset" option.
    However, the internal ID3v1 charset may be specified with the "CharsetID3" option. The encoding
    for ID3v2 information is stored in the file, so ExifTool converts ID3v2 text from this encoding
    to the character set specified by the "Charset" option. ExifTool does not currently write ID3
    information.

  PDF
    PDF text strings are stored in either PDFDocEncoding (similar to Windows Latin1) or Unicode
    (UCS-2). When reading, ExifTool converts to the character set specified by the "Charset" option.
    When writing, ExifTool encodes input text from the specified character set as Unicode only if
    the string contains special characters, otherwise PDFDocEncoding is used.

  Photoshop
    Some Photoshop resource names are stored as Pascal strings with unknown encoding. By default,
    ExifTool assumes MacRoman encoding and converts this to UTF-8, but the internal and external
    character sets may be specified with the "CharsetPhotoshop" and "Charset" options respectively.

  QuickTime
    QuickTime text strings may be stored in a variety of poorly document formats. ExifTool does its
    best to decode these according to the "Charset" option setting. For some QuickTime strings,
    ExifTool assumes a default encoding of MacRoman, but this may be changed with the
    "CharsetQuickTime" option.

  AIFF
    AIFF strings are assumed to be stored in MacRoman, and are converted according to the "Charset"
    option when reading.

  RIFF
    The internal encoding of RIFF strings (eg. in AVI and WAV files) is assumed to be Latin unless
    otherwise specified by the RIFF CSET chunk or the "CharsetRIFF" option.

  MIE
    MIE strings are stored as either UTF-8 or ISO 8859-1. When reading, UTF-8 strings are converted
    according to the "Charset" option, and ISO 8859-1 strings are never converted. When writing,
    input strings are converted from the specified character set to UTF-8. The resulting strings are
    stored as UTF-8 if they contain multi-byte UTF-8 character sequences, otherwise they are stored
    as ISO 8859-1.

  Vorbis
    Vorbis comments are stored as UTF-8, and are converted to the character set specified by the
    "Charset" option.

AUTHOR
    Copyright 2003-2022, Phil Harvey

    This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as
    Perl itself.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
    Many people have helped in the development of ExifTool through their bug reports, comments and
    suggestions, and/or additions to the code. See the ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS in the individual
    Image::ExifTool modules and in html/index.html of the Image::ExifTool distribution package for a
    list of people who have contributed to this project.

SEE ALSO
    exiftool(1), Image::ExifTool::TagNames(3pm), Image::ExifTool::Shortcuts(3pm),
    Image::ExifTool::Shift(3pm), Image::Info(3pm), Image::MetaData::JPEG(3pm)

Image::ExifTool
NAME SYNOPSIS DESCRIPTION CONFIGURATION EXPORTS METHODS
ImageInfo Options ClearOptions ExtractInfo GetInfo WriteInfo GetTagList GetFoundTags GetRequestedTags GetValue SetNewValue GetNewValue SetNewValuesFromFile CountNewValues SaveNewValues RestoreNewValues SetFileModifyDate SetFileName SetNewGroups GetNewGroups GetTagID GetDescription GetGroup GetGroups BuildCompositeTags
CHARACTER ENCODINGS
Photoshop QuickTime Vorbis
AUTHOR ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS SEE ALSO
exiftool(1), Image::ExifTool::TagNames(3pm), Image::ExifTool::Shortcuts(3pm),

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