PIL is the Python Imaging Library which provides the python interpreter with image editing capabilities. The Image module provides a class with the same name which is used to represent a PIL image. The module also provides a number of factory functions, including functions to load images from files, and to create new images.
Image.resize() Returns a resized copy of this image.
Syntax: Image.resize(size, resample=0)
Parameters:
size – The requested size in pixels, as a 2-tuple: (width, height).
resample – An optional resampling filter. This can be one of PIL.Image.NEAREST (use nearest neighbour), PIL.Image.BILINEAR (linear interpolation), PIL.Image.BICUBIC (cubic spline interpolation), or PIL.Image.LANCZOS (a high-quality downsampling filter). If omitted, or if the image has mode “1” or “P”, it is set PIL.Image.NEAREST. Otherwise, the default filter is Resampling.BICUBIC.
Returns type: An Image object.
Image Used:
Python3
# Importing Image class from PIL module from PIL import Image # Opens a image in RGB mode im = Image. open (r "C:\Users\System-Pc\Desktop\ybear.jpg" ) # Size of the image in pixels (size of original image) # (This is not mandatory) width, height = im.size # Setting the points for cropped image left = 4 top = height / 5 right = 154 bottom = 3 * height / 5 # Cropped image of above dimension # (It will not change original image) im1 = im.crop((left, top, right, bottom)) newsize = ( 300 , 300 ) im1 = im1.resize(newsize) # Shows the image in image viewer im1.show() |
Output:
Another example:Here we use the different newsize value.
Python3
# Importing Image class from PIL module from PIL import Image # Opens a image in RGB mode im = Image. open (r "C:\Users\System-Pc\Desktop\ybear.jpg" ) # Size of the image in pixels (size of original image) # (This is not mandatory) width, height = im.size # Setting the points for cropped image left = 6 top = height / 4 right = 174 bottom = 3 * height / 4 # Cropped image of above dimension # (It will not change original image) im1 = im.crop((left, top, right, bottom)) newsize = ( 200 , 200 ) im1 = im1.resize(newsize) # Shows the image in image viewer im1.show() |
Output: