Guitar tuning and intonation is far more complex than raw data. The bridge needs to be in the right place for each string if you want the 5th fret to be tuned at the same time as the 17th fret, and even if you get those two pitches exactly an octave apart, frets far from 5 and 17 may be a tad off, and the first fret can be very sharp if the nut is high, and open strings are often a little bit flat with traditional nuts and their placement, too, from having such a different way of defining the end point of the string (sitting in a slot vs pressed and curved against a fret).
IOW, you would need to be able to adjust the position of every fret for every string independently, to perfectly intonate a guitar for all notes. People must accept the futility, and just find an approach to minimize the biggest errors based on what parts of the neck they play on the most. Raw data is linear until it is not; either at clipping, or at base ISO in the highest highlights with a fraction of cameras.