V1.02
Thom Hogan’s Complete Guide to the Nikon D300
Page 499
Selected
As just outlined in the screen shots, above, the
D300 displays a thumbnail view of the images,
six at a time (Step 2, above). You navigate
through them exactly as you would in
thumbnail view (
<
and
>
key on the Direction
pad), pressing the center position on the
Direction pad on each image you want to erase
(each press is a toggle, and a small trash can
appears on any image scheduled for deletion—
Step 3, above). You can also press the Zoom In
(
h
) button to see a larger version of the
currently selected image (useful when you have
a sequence of very similar images and are
trying to erase just one). You confirm the
deletion of all the selected images by pressing
the
OK
button, navigating to
Yes
, and pressing
the
OK
button again when prompted (Step 4,
above). Images marked with a protect symbol
cannot be deleted; hidden images aren’t
displayed.
All
The D300 immediately displays a confirmation
prompt. Selecting
Yes
and confirming that by
pressing
OK
immediately deletes all
photographs on the card
except for ones that
have been marked as
Protected
or are
Hidden
.
One final aspect of deleting images is controlled by the
After
delete
option. This Menu Item allows you to choose which
image is shown or selected after you make an individual
image deletion:
•
Show next
. Displays the image that followed the one
deleted. If the image deleted is the last one on the card,
then the previous image (the new last image) is displayed.
This is the default behavior of the camera.
•
Show previous
. Displays the image that preceded the
one deleted. If the image deleted is the first one on the