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NanoMD at a glance
NanoMD
NanoMD represents the recurring tendency in documentation tooling to carve out restricted markdown subsets whenever implementers value deterministic parsing, low overhead, and minimal feature surfaces over full compatibility.
CAP at a glance
CAP
Digital photography fragmented into many manufacturer-specific raw formats because camera makers optimized for their own sensors, metadata, and software ecosystems rather than for one shared public raw standard.
Format comparison
| Feature | NanoMD | CAP |
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| File type | Not available | Not available |
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| Compression / quality | Not available | Not available |
| File size characteristics | Not available | Not available |
| Compatibility | Not available | Not available |
| Editability | Not available | Not available |
| Created year | Not available | Not available |
| Inventor | Not available | Not available |
| Status | Not available | Not available |
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| Archival suitability | Not available | Not available |
| Metadata handling | Not available | Not available |
| Delivery profile | Not available | Not available |
| Workflow fit | Not available | Not available |
| Vector scaling | Not available | Not available |
When to use each format
When to use NanoMD
- authoring
- review and collaboration
- distribution
- Keeps parsing and rendering requirements intentionally small.
When to use CAP
- capture ingest
- editing
- web or print delivery
- Preserve capture-stage image data for later interpretation.
FAQs
Why convert NanoMD to CAP?
Choose CAP as target when keeping compatibility with a legacy capture workflow or preserving source material from a proprietary imaging system.
What changes when converting NanoMD to CAP?
Convert to CAP when keeping compatibility with a legacy capture workflow or preserving source material from a proprietary imaging system. It is mainly useful in archive recovery and controlled migration scenarios.
What should I review after converting NanoMD to CAP?
After conversion, review these destination checks: Open converted output in LibRaw and verify behavior on real samples; Compare output against the expected raw quality profile; Many are vendor-specific and poorly documented publicly.
How can I keep quality stable in NanoMD to CAP conversion?
Run representative samples, keep settings deterministic, and monitor these risks: Compatibility often depends on decoder support in tools such as LibRaw, Adobe Camera Raw, or vendor software; Many are vendor-specific and poorly documented publicly; Validate destination compatibility before large-batch conversion.