Also you can do:
$image = new Imagick($file);
$width = $image->getImageWidth();
$height = $image->getImageHeight();
to catch the witdth/height parameters without use pingImage() initialization.
(PECL imagick 2, PECL imagick 3)
Imagick::pingImage — Fetch basic attributes about the image
$filename
) : boolThis method can be used to query image width, height, size, and format without reading the whole image in to memory.
filename
The filename to read the information from.
成功时返回 true
。
Also you can do:
$image = new Imagick($file);
$width = $image->getImageWidth();
$height = $image->getImageHeight();
to catch the witdth/height parameters without use pingImage() initialization.
Just a warning: don't use Eero Niemi's code (identifyImage with pingImage) if you just want to get the image width and height, because it will actually be slower than reading the whole image into memory - about 10x slower!
Correct code should be:
<?php
$image = new Imagick();
$image->pingImage($file);
$width = $image->getImageWidth();
$height = $image->getImageHeight();
?>
(this is around 15 times faster than reading the image in memory)
If you don't sure whether the file exists or not or maybe it's broken, then you should use try - catch construction. It prevents code fails, when code stops execution after call of pingImage (if the file doesn't exist or it's broken).
<?php
$im = new Imagick();
try {
$im->pingImage('3.jpg');
}
catch(ImagickException $e) {
echo "image doesn't exist";
}
?>
Actually the previous example causes file to be loaded twice on Imagick's stack, proper way to do this is:
<?php
$file = 'foo.jpg';
$image = new Imagick();
$image->pingImage($file);
$image_info = $image->identifyImage();
?>