The other answer is oversimplified because you can reduce the overall network throughput by sending HEAD
requests to the server to get the image size before downloading it -- immediately saving you almost all of the bandwidth for images with size < x.
Depending on the size of the pages involved, the choice of string operations used to extract the image URLs could be important as well. PHP's perfectly adequate for the needs it caters for but it's still a moderately slow, interpreted language at the end of the day and I find calling routines which involve moving large substrings around appreciably laggy sometimes. In this case parsing it fully, even using a simple library, is overkill.
The reason I would go to extreme lengths to download only the bare minimum of images is that some PHP methods for doing so are very slow. If I use copy()
to download a file and then do the same thing using raw sockets or cURL, copy()
sometimes takes at least twice as long.
So choice of transfer method and choice of parsing method both have a noticeable effect.