Get pixel dimensions of a PNG on my Mac?

In Terminal, you can use the following:

$ sips -g pixelWidth Pictures/238337225.png 
/Users/danielbeck/Pictures/238337225.png
  pixelWidth: 1140
$ sips -g pixelHeight Pictures/238337225.png 
/Users/danielbeck/Pictures/238337225.png
  pixelHeight: 900

To extract the value only, use e.g.

$ sips -g pixelHeight Pictures/238337225.png | tail -n1 | cut -d" " -f4
900

To embed that in AppleScript:

set h to do shell script "sips -g pixelHeight /Users/danielbeck/Pictures/238337225.png | tail -n1 | cut -d' ' -f4"
set w to do shell script "sips -g pixelWidth /Users/danielbeck/Pictures/238337225.png | tail -n1 | cut -d' ' -f4"
display alert "Height: " & (h as text) & "
Width: " & (w as text)

Result:

enter image description here


Alternatively, you can read the Spotlight metadata:

mdls Pictures/238337225.png | grep kMDItemPixel
kMDItemPixelCount              = 1026000
kMDItemPixelHeight             = 900
kMDItemPixelWidth              = 1140

To get the names and dimensions of all files in a directory:

$ mdls Pictures/* | grep "\(kMDItemDisplayName\|mMDItemPixel\)"
[...]
kMDItemDisplayName             = "url.png"
kMDItemPixelCount              = 16384
kMDItemPixelHeight             = 128
kMDItemPixelWidth              = 128
[...]

Or alternatively, using find and sips:

find /Users/danielbeck/Pictures -type f -name "*.png" -exec sips -g pixelWidth {} \; -exec sips -g pixelHeight {} \;


More more flexibility, wrap in a shell script:

$ cat dim.sh 
#!/usr/bin/env bash

filename=$1

if [ ! -f "$filename" ] ; then
    echo "$filename not found!";
    exit 1
fi

h=$( mdls "$filename" | grep kMDItemPixelHeight | tail -n1 | cut -d= -f2 )
w=$( mdls "$filename" | grep kMDItemPixelWidth | tail -n1 | cut -d= -f2 )

osascript -e "tell application \"Finder\" to {activate, display alert \"$filename\\nWidth:$w\\nHeight:$h\"}"

Result after chmod +x dim/sh:

$ ./dim.sh Pictures/flying_cars.png

enter image description here


You could easily extend the script to display dimensions for multiple files at once, or e.g. all png files in a certain directory. Output is as Finder dialog, so you can embed it into an Automator service:

Open Automator and select to create a Service that receives image files as input in any application.

Add a Run Shell Script action that receives input as arguments and enter the following:

dlg=
for f in "$@"
do
    h=$( mdls "$f" | grep kMDItemPixelHeight | tail -n1 | cut -d= -f2 )
    w=$( mdls "$f" | grep kMDItemPixelWidth | tail -n1 | cut -d= -f2 )
    dlg="$dlg$f\nW:$w H:$h\n"
done
osascript -e "tell application \"Finder\" to {activate, display alert \"$dlg\"}"
exit 0

Save as Show Image Dimensions. Select a few image files in Finder and select Finder » Services » Show Image Dimensions or Right-click on one of the files and [Services »] Show Image Dimensions

enter image description here

enter image description here


Find the file in a Finder window, and either:

  • Highlight the file and press ⌘ Cmd + ⌥ Option + I, or

  • Control-click the file and hold ⌥ Option so you can select "Show Inspector".

This will open an inspector which is similar to the Get Info window, but updates each time you select a file.

Now expand the "More info" section on the inspector. You will be able to see the PNG's dimensions and color depth, among other data. Select a new file to see its dimensions in the inspector.

An inspector window showing the highlighted file in a Finder window


This is an old question, but for current readers, there is now a readily available solution. In Yosemite, you can turn on the "Show Preview Column" in Finder. Finder > View > Show View Options

Here's a screenshot.

screenshot.

Tags:

Macos

Png

Images