#marred-PNGquant
This is a fork of improved-pngquant that is a fork of pngquant.
#pngquant
This the official new pngquant
.
pngquant converts 24/32-bit RGBA PNGs to 8-bit palette with alpha channel preserved. Such images are compatible with all modern browsers, and a special compatibility setting exists which helps transparency degrade well in Internet Explorer 6.
Quantized files are often 40-70% smaller than their 24/32-bit version.
This utility works on Linux, Mac OS X and Windows.
##Usage
- batch conversion of multiple files:
pngquant 256 *.png
- Unix-style stdin/stdout chaining:
… | pngquant 16 | …
To further reduce file size, you may want to consider optipng or ImageOptim.
##Improvements since 1.0
-
Significantly better quality of quantisation
- uses variance instead of popularity for box selection (improvement suggested in the original median cut paper)
- feedback loop that repeats median cut for poorly quantized colors
- additional colormap improvement using Voronoi iteration
- supports much larger number of colors in input images without degradation of quality
- more accurate remapping of semitransparent colors
- special dithering algorithm that does not add noise in well-quantized areas of the image
- gamma correction (output is always generated with gamma 2.2 for web compatibility)
-
More flexible commandline usage
- number of colors defaults to 256
- standard switches like
--
and-
are allowed
-
Refactored and modernised code
- C99 with no workarounds for old systems
- floating-point math used throughout
- Intel SSE3 optimisations
##Options
See pngquant -h
for full list.
###--quality min-max
min
and max
are numbers in range 0 (worst) to 100 (perfect), similar to JPEG. pngquant will use the least amount of colors required to meet or exceed the max
quality. If conversion results in quality below the min
quality the image won't be saved (if outputting to stdin, 24-bit original will be output) and pngquant will exit with status code 99.
pngquant --quality=65-80 image.png
###--ext new.png
Set custom extension (suffix) for output filename. By default -or8.png
or -fs8.png
is used. If you use -ext .png -force
options pngquant will overwrite input files in place (use with caution).
###--speed N
Speed/quality trade-off from 1 (brute-force) to 10 (fastest). The default is 3. Speed 10 has 5% lower quality, but is 8 times faster than the default.
###--iebug
Workaround for IE6, which only displays fully opaque pixels. pngquant will make almost-opaque pixels fully opaque and will avoid creating new transparent colors.
###--version
Print version information to stdout.
###-
Read image from stdin and send result to stdout.
###--
Stops processing of arguments. This allows use of file names that start with -
. If you're using pngquant in a script, it's advisable to put this before file names:
pngquant $OPTIONS -- "$FILE"