Re saving images with Transparent background and uncompressed
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Abdul Hannan Qureshi
on 8 Mar 2024
Edited: Abdul Hannan Qureshi
on 9 Mar 2024
Hi,
My query is very simple. I am basically renaming images *.JPG files. However, renamed and saved files are showing background and are compressed.
How can I keep background transparent and can I save them as uncompressed.
p=dir('Data\*.jpg'); %input files
filenames = {p.name};
nfiles = length(filenames);
for K = 1 : nfiles
thisfile = filenames{K};
[~, basename, ~] = fileparts(thisfile);
newname = sprintf("%d.jpg", K);
out_path = 'Data'; % Give path here
fullFileName = fullfile(out_path, newname);
data = imread(thisfile);
imwrite(data, fullFileName);
end
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Accepted Answer
Florian Bidaud
on 8 Mar 2024
Edited: Florian Bidaud
on 8 Mar 2024
If you want to do stuff after loading the image and then save it without the background, you need to load with BackgroundColor = 'none'. But here I'm surprised as you use a jpg file, which cannot contains transparent pixels. Could you show an example of input and output of your image ?
data = imread(thisfile,BackgroundColor='none');
2 Comments
DGM
on 8 Mar 2024
Edited: DGM
on 8 Mar 2024
This is correct. There isn't any transparency information, at least not in a base JPG. JPEG2000 does support transparency, but imread() can't read it, and imwrite() can't write it. So either you have no transparency, or you do, and there's nothing you can do with it in MATLAB.
If you're editing JPGs from another source (e.g. a camera or photoshop), then avoid transcoding through MATLAB at all costs. As a general rule, avoid ever writing to JPG if at all possible. MATLAB cannot write anything but a 4:2:0 downsampled JPG (default is 75%). As lossy JPGs go, that's a trash-quality JPG.
EDIT: imwrite() can write a 4:4:4 JPG or JP2, but only if the 'lossless' option is selected. At that point, we have to question whether there's any point in using JPG/JP2 anymore, since a lot of things won't read a lossless JPG/JP2, and you're probably not getting any more compression than you would just using a widely-supported PNG.
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