I need to resize an image, but the image quality cannot be affected by this.

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36% accept rate
Can you give us more details? How large are your images, and what size do you need them to be? – Mark Ransom Sep 17 '08 at 21:19
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Are you scaling up or down? – erlando Sep 17 '08 at 21:21
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imageresizing.net - This library produces the highest-quality images you can get with .NET – Computer Linguist Jul 17 '11 at 9:10
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10 Answers

As rcar says, you can't without losing some quality, the best you can do in c# is:

Bitmap newImage = new Bitmap(newWidth, newHeight);
using (Graphics gr = Graphics.FromImage(newImage))
{
    gr.SmoothingMode = SmoothingMode.AntiAlias;
    gr.InterpolationMode = InterpolationMode.HighQualityBicubic;
    gr.PixelOffsetMode = PixelOffsetMode.HighQuality;
    gr.DrawImage(srcImage, new Rectangle(0, 0, newWidth, newHeight));
}
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I might add that (if possible) the user should start with a Bitmap image that is, say, twice as large as it needs to be and then scale down. The resulting image should be pretty smooth. – Pretzel Nov 21 '08 at 20:54
+1 for scale down. never up, whilst you can scale up, even coding an unsharp mask will not get you a good result. – Mauro Nov 5 '10 at 8:54
+1 Thank you- this is amazingly helpful! – Shaul Jun 28 '11 at 11:37
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Unless you're doing vector graphics, there's no way to resize an image without potentially losing some image quality.

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unless you're expanding it... – Blair Conrad Sep 17 '08 at 21:18
You can expand it without losing any information, but there are different types of filters you can use which give different results - zero-order hold, low-pass, etc. – Adam Rosenfield Sep 17 '08 at 21:21
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Unless you resize up, you cannot do this with raster graphics.

What you can do with good filtering and smoothing is to resize without losing any noticable quality.

You can also alter the DPI metadata of the image (assuming it has some) which will keep exactly the same pixel count, but will alter how image editors think of it in 'real-world' measurements.

And just to cover all bases, if you really meant just the file size of the image and not the actual image dimensions, I suggest you look at a lossless encoding of the image data. My suggestion for this would be to resave the image as a .png file (I tend to use paint as a free transcoder for images in windows. Load image in paint, save as in the new format)

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You can't resize an image without losing some quality, simply because you are reducing the number of pixels.

Don't reduce the size client side, because browsers don't do a good job of resizing images.

What you can do is programatically change the size before you render it, or as a user uploads it.

Here is an article that explains one way to do this in c#: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/GDI-plus/imageresize.aspx

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I believe what you're looking to do is "Resize/Resample" your images. Here is a good site that gives instructions and provides a utility class(That I also happen to use):

http://www.codeproject.com/KB/GDI-plus/imgresizoutperfgdiplus.aspx

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See if you like the image resizing quality of this open source ASP.NET module. There's a live demo, so you can mess around with it yourself. It yields results that are (to me) impossible to distinguish from Photoshop output. It also has similar file sizes - MS did a good job on their JPEG encoder.

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There is something out there, context aware resizing, don't know if you will be able to use it, but it's worth looking at, that's for sure

A nice video demo (Enlarging appears towards the middle) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vIFCV2spKtg

Here there could be some code. http://www.semanticmetadata.net/2007/08/30/content-aware-image-resizing-gpl-implementation/

Was that overkill? Maybe there are some easy filters you can apply to an enlarged image to blur the pixels a bit, you could look into that.

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I suspect it has nothing to do with the original question, but I do love this technique. – Matt Cruikshank Sep 17 '08 at 21:35
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Are you resizing larger, or smaller? By a small % or by a larger factor like 2x, 3x? What do you mean by quality for your application? And what type of images - photographs, hard-edged line drawings, or what? Writing your own low-level pixel grinding code or trying to do it as much as possible with existing libraries (.net or whatever)?

There is a large body of knowledge on this topic. The key concept is interpolation.

Browsing recommendations:
* http://www.all-in-one.ee/~dersch/interpolator/interpolator.html
* http://www.cambridgeincolour.com/tutorials/image-interpolation.htm
* for C#: https://secure.codeproject.com/KB/GDI-plus/imageprocessing4.aspx?display=PrintAll&fid=3657&df=90&mpp=25&noise=3&sort=Position&view=Quick&fr=26&select=629945 * this is java-specific but might be educational - http://today.java.net/pub/a/today/2007/04/03/perils-of-image-getscaledinstance.html

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Here is a forum thread that provides a C# image resizing code sample. You could use one of the GD library binders to do resampling in C#.

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private static Image resizeImage(Image imgToResize, Size size)
{
int sourceWidth = imgToResize.Width;
int sourceHeight = imgToResize.Height;

float nPercent = 0;
float nPercentW = 0;
float nPercentH = 0;

nPercentW = ((float)size.Width / (float)sourceWidth);
nPercentH = ((float)size.Height / (float)sourceHeight);

if (nPercentH < nPercentW)
  nPercent = nPercentH;
else
  nPercent = nPercentW;

int destWidth = (int)(sourceWidth * nPercent);
int destHeight = (int)(sourceHeight * nPercent);

Bitmap b = new Bitmap(destWidth, destHeight);
Graphics g = Graphics.FromImage((Image)b);
g.InterpolationMode = InterpolationMode.HighQualityBicubic;

g.DrawImage(imgToResize, 0, 0, destWidth, destHeight);
g.Dispose();

return (Image)b;
}

from here

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