Reputation: 41
I'm in an introductory neural networking class so mind my ignorance. Also my first SO post.
I'm trying to resize some very highly resolved images within a dataset into 80x80p grayscale images in a new dataset. However, when I do this, I'd like to keep the filenames of each new image the same as the original image. The only way I know how to resave images into a new file is through a str(count) which isn't what I want. The filenames are important in creating a .csv file for my dataset later.
The only SO post I can find that is related is this:
Use original file name to save image
But the code suggested there didn't work - wasn't sure if I was going about it the wrong way.
import os
from PIL import Image
import imghdr
count=0
path1 = "/Users/..."
path2 = "/Users/..."
listing = os.listdir(path1)
for file in listing:
type = imghdr.what((path1 + file))
if type == "jpeg":
img = Image.open("/Users/..." +file).convert('LA')
img_resized = img.resize((80,80))
img_resized.save(path2 + str(count) + '.png')
count +=1
pass
pass
Upvotes: 3
Views: 675
Reputation: 1492
Reuse the original filename that you get from the for loop i.e. file
and, split it into filename and extension using os.path.splitext()
like below:
import os
from PIL import Image
import imghdr
count=0
path1 = "/Users/..."
path2 = "/Users/..."
listing = os.listdir(path1)
for file in listing:
type = imghdr.what((path1 + file))
if type == "jpeg":
img = Image.open("/Users/..." +file).convert('LA')
img_resized = img.resize((80,80))
# splitting the original filename to remove extension
img_filename = os.path.splitext(file)[0]
img_resized.save(path2 + img_filename + '.png')
count +=1
pass
Another option, we can use python str
's built-in split
method to split the original filename by .
and discard the extension.
import os
from PIL import Image
import imghdr
count=0
path1 = "/Users/..."
path2 = "/Users/..."
listing = os.listdir(path1)
for file in listing:
type = imghdr.what((path1 + file))
if type == "jpeg":
img = Image.open("/Users/..." +file).convert('LA')
img_resized = img.resize((80,80))
# splitting the original filename to remove extension
img_filename = file.split(".")[0]
img_resized.save(path2 + img_filename + '.png')
count +=1
pass
So, if an image has a name such as some_image.jpeg
then, the img_filename
will have a value some_image
as we splitted by . and discarded .jpeg
part of it.
NOTE: This option assumes the original_filename will not contain any .
other than the extension.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 2231
I assume that image name is on path1. If so you can grap image name from there in this way:
x=path1.rsplit('/',1)[1]
We are splitting path1 on last slash and taking image name string via indexing.
Upvotes: 0