jpeg — Read and write JPEG files
Deprecated since version 2.6: The jpeg
module has been removed in Python 3.
The module jpeg
provides access to the jpeg compressor and decompressor written by the Independent JPEG Group (IJG). JPEG is a standard for compressing pictures; it is defined in ISO 10918. For details on JPEG or the Independent JPEG Group software refer to the JPEG standard or the documentation provided with the software.
A portable interface to JPEG image files is available with the Python Imaging Library (PIL) by Fredrik Lundh. Information on PIL is available at http://www.pythonware.com/products/pil/.
The jpeg
module defines an exception and some functions.
-
exception jpeg.error
-
Exception raised by
compress()
anddecompress()
in case of errors.
-
jpeg.compress(data, w, h, b)
-
Treat data as a pixmap of width w and height h, with b bytes per pixel. The data is in SGI GL order, so the first pixel is in the lower-left corner. This means that
gl.lrectread()
return data can immediately be passed tocompress()
. Currently only 1 byte and 4 byte pixels are allowed, the former being treated as greyscale and the latter as RGB color.compress()
returns a string that contains the compressed picture, in JFIF format.
-
jpeg.decompress(data)
-
Data is a string containing a picture in JFIF format. It returns a tuple
(data, width, height, bytesperpixel)
. Again, the data is suitable to pass togl.lrectwrite()
.
-
jpeg.setoption(name, value)
-
Set various options. Subsequent
compress()
anddecompress()
calls will use these options. The following options are available:Option
Effect
'forcegray'
Force output to be grayscale, even if input is RGB.
'quality'
Set the quality of the compressed image to a value between
0
and100
(default is75
). This only affects compression.'optimize'
Perform Huffman table optimization. Takes longer, but results in smaller compressed image. This only affects compression.
'smooth'
Perform inter-block smoothing on uncompressed image. Only useful for low- quality images. This only affects decompression.
See also
- JPEG Still Image Data Compression Standard
-
The canonical reference for the JPEG image format, by Pennebaker and Mitchell.
- Information Technology - Digital Compression and Coding of Continuous-tone Still Images - Requirements and Guidelines
-
The ISO standard for JPEG is also published as ITU T.81. This is available online in PDF form.
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Licensed under the PSF License.
https://docs.python.org/2.7/library/jpeg.html