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To solve Android build issue I need to replace all intermediate alpha pixel with solid pixel (leaving transparent background as is).

How to that with ImageMagick or other-command line tool to all images in a tree?

Image bg_all_block.9.png

 bg_all_block.9.png

Image btn_bg_common_press.9.png

btn_bg_common_press.9.png

enter image description here

UPDATE: I have found that I can detect if alpha is used, as in Detect Alpha Channel with ImageMagick

Other found links

3 Answers 3

106

To remove the alpha channel from single image use this command:

convert input.png -alpha off output.png

To remove the alpha channel from all images inside a folder, make use find to first find all PNG files, and then run 'm through convert:

find . -name "*.png" -exec convert "{}" -alpha off "{}" \;

Please test on a COPY of your files to be sure.

...

see dialog below, and the answer is based on that "we need to remove alpha that is not 255"

convert input.png -channel A -threshold 254 output.png

and for batch

mkdir batch
FOR %G IN (*.png) DO convert %G -channel A -threshold 254 batch\%G
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  • 2
    I don't do much Windows but it's probably mogrify -alpha off *.png. Not sure if mogrify has a -r switch for recursing through directories or if it will take */*.png Mar 9, 2015 at 8:06
  • Well, I found that this also removes transparent background for my icons. While I need only process those pixels with intermediate alpha... imagemagick.org/Usage/color_basics/#replace hints at some convert balloon.gif -fill white -opaque blue balloon_white.gif Now looking at what -opaque means Mar 9, 2015 at 8:09
  • Try -channel A -threshold 254 Mar 9, 2015 at 8:39
  • 1
    My pleasure, glad to have been of assistance - sorry I was a bit slow to get to the right solution today. Mar 9, 2015 at 9:33
  • 3
    But this one works: convert input.png -background white -alpha remove -flatten -alpha off output.png stackoverflow.com/a/28534287/2374478
    – Ansa211
    Mar 10, 2019 at 7:11
4

What worked for me on macOS for batch processing was:

for f in *.png; do convert "$f" -channel A -threshold 254 "${f%%.png}.png"; done
1

To remove alpha channel from all pictures in the folder (f.ex. all .png files) I use following command (in terminal on macOS):

for file in *.png; do convert $file -alpha deactivate; done

Unfortunately, none of any other solution given in this thread worked for me.

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