Search found 6 matches
- 2013-12-03T15:35:34-07:00
- Forum: Users
- Topic: -limit not working
- Replies: 8
- Views: 4096
Re: -limit not working
try leaving off the mb Try convert -limit area 128MB -list resource It should return an area limit of 128MB. If so, ImageMagick is behaving as expected. These together provides some information which moves me to the next question: when I run: convert -limit map area 128 -limit map 256 -limit disk ...
- 2013-12-03T10:57:03-07:00
- Forum: Users
- Topic: -limit not working
- Replies: 8
- Views: 4096
Re: -limit not working
It gives:
convert: invalid argument for option '128MB' : -limit
convert: invalid argument for option '128MB' : -limit
- 2013-12-03T02:15:36-07:00
- Forum: Users
- Topic: -limit not working
- Replies: 8
- Views: 4096
Re: -limit not working
I tried. But that doesn't seem make any difference...
- 2013-12-02T23:54:19-07:00
- Forum: Users
- Topic: -limit not working
- Replies: 8
- Views: 4096
Re: -limit not working
Thank you. But it doesn't solve my problem :( If I'm not specifying a disk limit will there be any problem? When it gives the error, is that because the disk limit (512mb) is too small? But I think it wouldn't take much space to process image, right? What is a proper value for disk size, e.g. 2 ...
- 2013-12-02T19:18:28-07:00
- Forum: Users
- Topic: -limit not working
- Replies: 8
- Views: 4096
-limit not working
Hi, I've been blocked on this for a whole day. Really need some help or idea. I run the command: convert -limit area 128mb -limit map 256mb -limit disk 512mb -format %w,%h, <inputFile> -identify <outputFile> It give the error: Could not read file as specified mime-type, file is invalid or corrupted ...
- 2013-11-27T14:03:56-07:00
- Forum: Users
- Topic: jpeg converted image get bigger than the original jpeg?
- Replies: 2
- Views: 1999
jpeg converted image get bigger than the original jpeg?
I'm new to ImageMagick so pardon me if this is a really stupid question. I ran the command : convert -format %w,%h, input.jpg -resize MxM> -identify output.jpg where M is the longest dimension of the image, say the input is 1024x768, then M=1024, so I'm assuming the dimension of output image will be ...