💾 Archived View for perso.pw › blog › articles › potw-pngquant.gmi captured on 2024-02-05 at 10:02:54. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content
⬅️ Previous capture (2023-05-24)
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Today as a "Port of the Week" article (that isn't published every week now but who cares) I would like to present you pngquant.
pngquant is a simple utility to compress png files in order to reduce them, with the goal of not altering the file in a visible way. pngquant is lossy which mean it modify the content, at the opposite of the optipng program which optimize the png file to try to reduce its size as possible without modifying the visual.
The easiest way to use pngquant is simply give the file to compress as an argument, a new file with the original file name with "-fs8" added before the file extension will be created.
$ pngquant file.png $ test -f file-fs8.png && echo true true
I made a simple screenshot of four terminals on my computer, I compared the file size of the original png, the png optimized with optipng and the compressed png using pngquant. I also included a conversion to jpg of the same size as the original file.
I used defaults of each commands.
File size (in kilobytes) % of original (lower is better) ======== =============== =============================== original 168 100 optipng 144 85.7 pngquant 50.2 29.9 jpeg 71% 169 100
The file produced by pngquant is less than a third of the original. Here are the files so you can try to check if you see differences with the pngquant version.
Compressed file using pngquant
Jpeg file converted with ImageMagick
Most of the time, compressing a png is suitable for publishing or sharing. For screenshots or digital pictures, jpg format is usually very bad and is only suitable for camera pictures.
For a drawn picture you should keep the original if you ever plan to make changes on it.