Method
VipsImagepngsave
Declaration [src]
int
vips_pngsave (
VipsImage* in,
const char* filename,
...
)
Description [src]
Optional arguments:
compression
: %gint, compression levelinterlace
: %gboolean, interlace imagefilter
:VipsForeignPngFilter
row filter flag(s)palette
: %gboolean, enable quantisation to 8bpp paletteQ
: %gint, quality for 8bpp quantisationdither
: %gdouble, amount of dithering for 8bpp quantizationbitdepth
: %gint, set write bit depth to 1, 2, 4, 8 or 16effort
: %gint, quantisation CPU effort
Write a VIPS image to a file as PNG.
compression
means compress with this much effort (0 - 9). Default 6.
Set interlace
to TRUE
to interlace the image with ADAM7
interlacing. Beware
than an interlaced PNG can be up to 7 times slower to write than a
non-interlaced image.
Use filter
to specify one or more filters, defaults to none,
see VipsForeignPngFilter
.
The image is automatically converted to RGB, RGBA, Monochrome or Mono + alpha before saving. Images with more than one byte per band element are saved as 16-bit PNG, others are saved as 8-bit PNG.
Set palette
to TRUE
to enable palette mode for RGB or RGBA images. A
palette will be computed with enough space for bitdepth
(1, 2, 4 or 8)
bits. Use Q
to set the optimisation effort, dither
to set the degree of
Floyd-Steinberg dithering and effort
to control the CPU effort
(1 is the fastest, 10 is the slowest, 7 is the default).
This feature requires libvips to be compiled with libimagequant.
The default bitdepth
is either 8 or 16 depending on the interpretation.
You can also set bitdepth
for mono and mono + alpha images, and the image
will be quantized.
XMP metadata is written to the XMP chunk. PNG comments are written to separate text chunks.
See also: vips_image_new_from_file().
This method is not directly available to language bindings.