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GIFSICLE(1) |
FreeBSD General Commands Manual |
GIFSICLE(1) |
gifsicle - manipulates GIF images and animations
gifsicle [options, frames, and filenames]...
gifsicle is a powerful command-line program for creating, editing,
manipulating, and getting information about GIF images and animations.
Gifsicle normally processes input GIF files according to
its command line options and writes the result to the standard output. The
-i option, for example, tells gifsicle to
interlace its inputs:
gifsicle -i < pic.gif > interlaced-pic.gif
Gifsicle is good at creating and manipulating GIF
animations. By default, it combines two or more input files into a
“flipbook” animation:
gifsicle pic1.gif pic2.gif pic3.gif > animation.gif
Use options like --delay, --loopcount, and
--optimize to tune your animations.
To modify GIF files in place, use the --batch
option. With --batch, gifsicle will modify the
files you specify instead of writing a new file to the standard output. To
interlace all the GIFs in the current directory, you could say:
gifsicle --batch -i *.gif
New users may want to skip to the Examples section at the end.
Concepts are on the left, relevant gifsicle options are on the right.
- Animations, changing
- frame selections, frame changes, etc.
- disposal
- --disposal
- looping
- --loopcount
- portions of
- frame selections
- smaller
- --optimize, --colors, --lossy
- speed
- --delay
- Bad output
- --careful
- Background color
- --background
- Colors, changing
- --change-color, --use-colormap, --dither,
--transform-colormap
- reducing number
- --colors, --dither, --gamma
- Comments
- --comment
- Extensions
- --extension, --app-extension, --extension-info
- File size
- --optimize, --unoptimize, --colors,
--lossy
- Image transformations
- cropping
- --crop, --crop-transparency
- flipping
- --flip-*
- resizing
- --resize, --scale
- rotating
- --rotate-*
- Grayscale
- --use-colormap
- Interlacing
- --interlace
- Positioning frames
- --position
- Screen, logical
- --logical-screen
- Selecting frames
- frame selections (like '#0')
- Transparency
- --transparent
- Warnings
- --no-warnings
gifsicle's command line consists of GIF input files and options. Most
options start with a dash (-) or plus (+); frame selections, a kind of option,
start with a number sign (#). Anything else is a GIF input file.
gifsicle reads and processes GIF input files in order. If
no GIF input file is given, or you give the special filename
‘-’, it reads from the standard input.
gifsicle exits with status 0 if there were no errors and
status 1 otherwise.
Every option has a long form, ‘--long-descriptive-name’.
You don't need to type the whole long descriptive name, just enough to make it
unambiguous.
Some options also have a short form, ‘-X’.
You can combine short options if they don't take arguments:
‘-IIb’ is the same as ‘-I -I -b’.
But be careful with options that do take arguments:
‘-cblah’ means ‘-c blah’, not
‘-c -b -l -a -h’.
Many options also have a converse,
‘--no-option’, which turns off the option. You can turn
off a short option ‘-X’ by saying
‘+X’ instead.
Mode options tell gifsicle what kind of output to generate. There can be
at most one, and it must precede any GIF inputs.
- --merge, -m
- Combine all GIF inputs into one file with multiple frames and write that
file to the standard output. This is the default mode.
- --batch, -b
- Modify each GIF input in place by reading and writing to the same
filename. (GIFs read from the standard input are written to the standard
output.)
- --explode, -e
- Create an output GIF for each frame of each input file. The output GIFs
are named ‘xxx.000’, ‘xxx.001’, and so on,
where ‘xxx’ is the name of the input file (or whatever you
specified with ‘--output’) and the numeric extension
is the frame number.
- --explode-by-name, -E
- Same as --explode, but write any named frames to
files ‘xxx.name’ instead of
‘xxx.frame-number’. Frames are named using the
‘--name’ option.
General options control the information gifsicle prints and where it
writes its output. The info options and --verbose can be
turned off with ‘--no-X’.
- --info, -I
- Print a human-readable description of each input GIF to the standard
output, or whatever file you specify with -o. This
option suppresses normal output, and cannot be combined with mode options
like --batch. If you give two
--info or -I options, however,
information is printed to standard error, and normal output takes place as
usual.
- --color-info, --cinfo
- Like --info, but also print information about input
files' colormaps.
- --extension-info, --xinfo
- Like --info, but also print any unrecognized GIF
extensions in a hexdump(1)-like format.
- --size-info, --sinfo
- Like --info, but also print information about
compressed image sizes.
- --help, -h
- Print usage information and exit.
- -o
file
- --output
file
- Send output to file. The special filename ‘-’ means
the standard output.
- --verbose, -V
- Print progress information (files read and written) to standard error.
- --no-warnings, -w
- Suppress all warning messages.
- --no-ignore-errors
- Exit with status 1 when encountering a very erroneous GIF. Default is to
muddle on.
- --version
- Print the version number and some short non-warranty information and exit.
- --careful
- Write slightly larger GIFs that avoid bugs in some other GIF
implementations. Some Java and Internet Explorer versions cannot display
the correct, minimal GIFs that Gifsicle produces. Use the
--careful option if you are having problems with a
particular image.
- --conserve-memory
- Conserve memory usage at the expense of processing time. This may be
useful if you are processing large GIFs on a computer without very much
memory. Or say --no-conserve-memory.
- --nextfile
- Allow input files to contain multiple concatenated GIF images. If a
filename appears multiple times on the command line, gifsicle will
read a new image from the file each time. This option can help scripts
avoid the need for temporary files. For example, to create an animated GIF
with three frames with different delays, you might run
"gifsicle --nextfile -d10 - -d20 - -d30 - >
out.gif" and write the three GIF images, in sequence, to
gifsicle's standard input.
- --multifile
- Like --nextfile, but read as many GIF images as
possible from each file. This option is intended for scripts. For
example, to merge an unknown number of GIF images into a single animation,
run "gifsicle --multifile - > out.gif" and
write the GIF images, in sequence, to gifsicle's standard input.
Any frame selections apply only to the last file in the
concatenation.
A frame selection tells gifsicle which frames to use from the current
input file. They are useful only for animations, as non-animated GIFs only
have one frame. Here are the acceptable forms for frame specifications.
- #num
- Select frame num. (The first frame is ‘#0’.
Negative numbers count backwards from the last frame, which is
‘#-1’.)
- #num1-num2
- Select frames num1 through num2.
- #num1-
- Select frames num1 through the last frame.
- #name
- Select the frame named name.
The ‘#’ character has special meaning for many
shells, so you generally need to quote it.
For example,
uses the first frame from happy.gif;
gifsicle happy.gif "#0-2"
uses its first three frames; and
gifsicle happy.gif "#-1-0"
uses its frames in reverse order (starting from frame #-1 -- the last frame --
and ending at frame #0 -- the first).
The action performed with the selected frames depends on the
current mode. In merge mode, only the selected frames are merged into the
output GIF. In batch mode, only the selected frames are modified; other
frames remain unchanged. In explode mode, only the selected frames are
exploded into output GIFs.
Frame change options insert new frames into an animation or replace or delete
frames that already exist. Some things -- for example, changing one frame in
an animation -- are difficult to express with frame selections, but easy with
frame changes.
- --delete frames
[frames...]
- Delete frames from the input GIF.
- --insert-before frame
other-GIFs
- Insert other-GIFs before frame in the input GIF.
- --append
other-GIFs
- Append other-GIFs to the input GIF.
- --replace frames
other-GIFs
- Replace frames from the input GIF with other-GIFs.
- --done
- Complete the current set of frame changes.
The frames arguments are frame selections (see above).
These arguments always refer to frames from the original input GIF.
So, if ‘a.gif’ has 3 frames and ‘b.gif’ has one,
this command
gifsicle a.gif --delete "#0" --replace "#2" b.gif
will produce an output animation with 2 frames: ‘a.gif’ frame 1,
then ‘b.gif’.
The other-GIFs arguments are any number of GIF input files
and frame selections. These images are combined in merge mode and added to
the input GIF. The other-GIFs last until the next frame change
option, so this command replaces the first frame of ‘in.gif’
with the merge of ‘a.gif’ and ‘b.gif’:
gifsicle -b in.gif --replace "#0" a.gif b.gif
This command, however, replaces the first frame of
‘in.gif’ with ‘a.gif’ and then processes
‘b.gif’ separately:
gifsicle -b in.gif --replace "#0" a.gif --done b.gif
Warning: You shouldn't use both frame selections and frame changes
on the same input GIF.
Image options modify input images -- by changing their interlacing,
transparency, and cropping, for example. Image options have three forms:
‘--X’, ‘--no-X’, and
‘--same-X’. The ‘--X’ form selects a
value for the feature, the ‘--no-X’ form turns off the
feature, and the ‘--same-X’ form means that the feature's
value is copied from each input. The default is always
‘--same-X’. For example,
-background="#0000FF" sets the background color
to blue, --no-background turns the background color off
(by setting it to 0), and --same-background uses input
images' existing background colors. You can give each option multiple times;
for example,
gifsicle -b -O2 -i a.gif --same-interlace b.gif c.gif
will make ‘a.gif’ interlaced, but leave ‘b.gif’ and
‘c.gif’ interlaced only if they were already.
- -B
color
- --background
color
- Set the output GIF's background to color. The argument can have the
same forms as in the --transparent option below.
- --crop
x1,y1-x2,y2
- --crop
x1,y1+widthxheight
- Crop the following input frames to a smaller rectangular area. The
top-left corner of this rectangle is (x1,y1); you can give
either the lower-right corner, (x2,y2), or the width and
height of the rectangle. In the
x1,y1+widthxheight form, width and
height can be zero or negative. A zero dimension means the cropping
area goes to the edge of the image; a negative dimension brings the
cropping area that many pixels back from the image edge. For example,
--crop 2,2+-2x-2 will shave 2 pixels off each side of
the input image. Cropping takes place before any rotation, flipping,
resizing, or positioning.
- --crop-transparency
- Crop any transparent borders off the following input frames. This happens
after any cropping due to the --crop option. It works
on the raw input images; for example, any transparency options have not
yet been applied.
- --flip-horizontal
- --flip-vertical
- Flip the following frames horizontally or vertically.
- -i
- --interlace
- Turn interlacing on.
- -S
widthxheight
- --logical-screen
widthxheight
- Set the output logical screen to widthxheight.
--no-logical-screen sets the output logical screen to
the size of the largest output frame, while
--same-logical-screen sets the output logical screen
to the largest input logical screen. --screen is a
synonym for --logical-screen.
- -p
x,y
- --position
x,y
- Set the following frames' positions to (x,y).
--no-position means --position
0,0. Normally, --position
x,y
places every succeeding frame exactly at x,y.
However, if an entire animation is input, x,y is treated as
the position for the animation.
- --rotate-90
- --rotate-180
- --rotate-270
- Rotate the following frames by 90, 180, or 270 degrees.
--no-rotate turns off any rotation.
- -t
color
- --transparent
color
- Make color transparent in the following frames. Color can be
a colormap index (0-255), a hexadecimal color specification (like
"#FF00FF" for magenta), or slash- or comma-separated red, green
and blue values (each between 0 and 255).
Extension options add non-visual information to the output GIF. This includes
names, comments, and generic extensions.
- --app-extension app-name
extension
- Add an application extension named app-name and with the value
extension to the output GIF.
--no-app-extensions removes application extensions
from the input images.
- -c
text
- --comment
text
- Add a comment, text, to the output GIF. The comment will be placed
before the next frame in the stream. --no-comments
removes comments from the input images.
- --extension number
extension
- Add an extension numbered number and with the value
extension to the output GIF. Number can be in decimal,
octal, hex, or it can be a single character like ‘n’, whose
ASCII value is used. --no-extensions (or
+x) removes extensions from the input images.
- -n
text
- --name
text
- Set the next frame's name to text. This name is stored as an
extension in the output GIF (extension number 0xCE, followed by the
characters of the frame name). --no-names removes
name extensions from the input images.
Animation options apply to GIF animations, or to individual frames in GIF
animations. As with image options, most animation options have three forms,
‘--X’, ‘--no-X’, and
‘--same-X’, and you can give animation options multiple
times; for example,
gifsicle -b a.gif -d50 "#0" "#1" -d100 "#2" "#3"
sets the delays of frames 0 and 1 to 50, and frames 2 and 3 to 100.
- -d
time
- --delay
time
- Set the delay between frames to time in hundredths of a second.
- -D
method
- --disposal
method
- Set the disposal method for the following frames to method. A
frame's disposal method determines how a viewer should remove the frame
when it's time to display the next. Method can be a number between
0 and 7 (although only 0 through 3 are generally meaningful), or one of
these names: none (leave the frame visible for future frames to
build upon), asis (same as "none"), background (or
bg) (replace the frame with the background), or previous
(replace the frame with the area from the previous displayed frame).
--no-disposal means
--disposal=none.
- -l[count]
- --loopcount[=count]
- Set the Netscape loop extension to count. Count is an
integer, or forever to loop endlessly. If you supply a
--loopcount option without specifying count,
Gifsicle will use forever. --no-loopcount (the
default) turns off looping.
Set the loop count to one less than the number of times you
want the animation to run. An animation with
--no-loopcount will show every frame once;
--loopcount=1 will loop once, thus showing every
frame twice; and so forth. Note that --loopcount=0
is equivalent to --loopcount=forever, not
--no-loopcount.
- -O[level]
- --optimize[=level]
- Attempt to shrink the file sizes of GIF animations. Level
determines how much optimization is done; higher levels take longer, but
may have better results. There are currently three levels:
- -O1
- Store only the changed portion of each image. This is the default.
- -O2
- Store only the changed portion of each image, and use transparency.
- -O3
- Try several optimization methods (usually slower, sometimes better
results).
Other optimization flags provide finer-grained control.
- -Okeep-empty
- Preserve empty transparent frames (they are dropped by default).
You may also be interested in other options for shrinking GIFs,
such as -k, --lossy, and
--no-extensions. Note that -O does
not guarantee to shrink file size, and in rare cases, even
-O3 may actually enlarge file size.
- -U
- --unoptimize
- Unoptimize GIF animations into an easy-to-edit form.
GIF animations are often optimized (see
--optimize) to make them smaller and faster to
load, which unfortunately makes them difficult to edit.
--unoptimize changes optimized input GIFs into
unoptimized GIFs, where each frame is a faithful representation of what
a user would see at that point in the animation.
Image transformation options apply to entire GIFs as they are read or written.
They can be turned off with ‘--no-option’.
- --resize
widthxheight
- Resize the output GIF to the given width and height. If
width or height is an underscore ‘_’, that
dimension is chosen so that the aspect ratio remains unchanged. Resizing
happens after all input frames have been combined and before optimization.
Resizing uses logical screen dimensions; if the input stream has an
unusual logical screen (many GIF displayers ignore logical screens), you
may want to provide --no-logical-screen (or
+S) to reset it so gifsicle uses image
dimensions instead. See also --resize-method.
- --resize-width
width
- --resize-height
height
- Resize to a given width or height, preserving aspect ratio. Equivalent to
--resize
widthx_ or
--resize
_xheight.
- --resize-fit
widthxheight
- --resize-touch
widthxheight
- Resize the output GIF to fit within a rectangle with dimensions
widthxheight. The aspect ratio remains unchanged. The
--resize-fit option only shrinks the image—no
resize is performed if the GIF already fits within the rectangle. Either
width or height may be an underscore ‘_’,
which leaves that dimension unconstrained.
- --resize-fit-width
width
- --resize-fit-height
height
- --resize-touch-width
width
- --resize-touch-height
height
- Like --resize-fit
and
--resize-touch, but constrains only one dimension.
- --scale
Xfactor[xYfactor]
- Scale the output GIF's width and height by Xfactor and
Yfactor. If Yfactor is not given, it defaults to
Xfactor. Scaling happens after all input frames have been combined
and before optimization.
- --resize-method
method
- Set the method used to resize images. The ‘sample’ method
runs very quickly, but when shrinking images, it produces noisy results.
The ‘mix’ method is somewhat slower, but produces
better-looking results. The default method is currently
‘mix’.
Details: The resize methods differ most when shrinking images. The
‘sample’ method is a point sampler: each pixel position in the
output image maps to exactly one pixel position in the input. When
shrinking, full rows and columns from the input are dropped. The other
methods use all input pixels, which generally produces better-looking
images. The ‘box’ method, a box sampler, is faster than the
more complex filters and produces somewhat sharper results, but there will
be anomalies when shrinking images by a small amount in one dimension. (Some
output pixels will correspond to exactly 1 input row or column, while others
will correspond to exactly 2 input rows or columns.) The ‘mix’
method is a full bilinear interpolator. This is slower and produces somewhat
blurrier results, but avoids anomalies.
Gifsicle also supports more complex resamplers, including
Catmull-Rom cubic resampling (‘catrom’), the
Mitchell-Netravali filter (‘mitchell’), a 2-lobed Lanczos
filter (‘lanczos2’), and a 3-lobed Lanczos filter
(‘lanczos3’). These filters are slower still, but can give
sharper, better results.
- --resize-colors
n
- Allow Gifsicle to add intermediate colors when resizing images. Normally,
Gifsicle's resize algorithms use input images' color palettes without
changes. When shrinking images with very few colors (e.g., pure
black-and-white images), adding intermediate colors can improve the
results. Example: --resize-colors
64 allows
Gifsicle to add intermediate colors for images that have fewer than
64 input colors.
Color options apply to entire GIFs as they are read or written. They can be
turned off with ‘--no-option’.
- -k num
- --colors
num
- Reduce the number of distinct colors in each output GIF to num or
less. Num must be between 2 and 256. This can be used to shrink
output GIFs or eliminate any local color tables.
Normally, an adaptive group of colors is chosen from the
existing color table. You can affect this process with the
--color-method option or by giving your own
colormap with --use-colormap. Gifsicle may need to
add an additional color (making num+1 in all) if there is
transparency in the image.
- --color-method
method
- Determine how a smaller colormap is chosen.
‘diversity’, the default, is xv(1)'s diversity
algorithm, which uses a strict subset of the existing colors and generally
produces good results. ‘blend-diversity’ is a
modification of this: some color values are blended from groups of
existing colors. ‘median-cut’ is the median cut
algorithm described by Heckbert. --method is a
synonym for --color-method.
- -f
- --dither[=method]
- When --dither is on and the colormap is changed,
combinations of colors are used to approximate missing colors. This looks
better, but makes bigger files and can cause animation artifacts, so it is
off by default.
Specify a dithering algorithm with the optional method
argument. The default, ‘floyd-steinberg’, uses
Floyd-Steinberg error diffusion. This usually looks best, but can cause
animation artifacts, because dithering choices will vary from frame to
frame. Gifsicle also supports ordered dithering algorithms that avoid
animation artifacts. The ‘ro64’ mode uses a large,
random-looking pattern and generally produces good results. The
‘o3’, ‘o4’, and
‘o8’ modes use smaller, more regular patterns. The
‘ordered’ mode chooses a good ordered dithering
algorithm. For special effects, try the halftone modes
‘halftone’, ‘squarehalftone’,
and ‘diagonal’. Some modes take optional parameters
using commas. The halftone modes take a cell size and a color limit:
‘halftone,10,3’ creates 10-pixel wide halftone
cells where each cell uses up to 3 colors.
- --gamma
gamma
- Set the gamma correction to gamma, which can be a real number or
‘srgb’. Roughly speaking, higher numbers exaggerate
shadows and lower numbers exaggerate highlights. The default is the
function defined by the standard sRGB color space, which usually works
well. (Its effects are similar to --gamma=2.2.) Gifsicle uses gamma
correction when choosing a color palette (--colors) and when
dithering (--dither).
- --lossy[=lossiness]
- Alter image colors to shrink output file size at the cost of artifacts and
noise. Lossiness determines how many artifacts are allowed; higher
values can result in smaller file sizes, but cause more artifacts. The
default lossiness is 20.
- --change-color color1
color2
- Change color1 to color2 in the following input GIFs. (The
color arguments have the same forms as in the
-t option.) Change multiple colors by giving the
option multiple times. Color changes don't interfere with one another, so
you can safely swap two colors with
‘--change-color color1 color2
--change-color color2 color1’.
They all take effect as an input GIF is read.
--no-change-color cancels all color changes.
- --transform-colormap
command
- Command should be a shell command that reads from standard input
and writes to standard output. Each colormap in the output GIF is
translated into text colormap format (see
--use-colormap below) and piped to the command. The
output that command generates (which should also be in text colormap
format) will replace the input colormap. The replacement doesn't consider
color matching, so pixels that used color slot n in the input will
still use color slot n in the output.
- --use-colormap
colormap
- Change the image to use colormap. Each pixel in the image is
changed to the closest match in colormap (or, if
--dither is on, to a dithered combination of colors
in colormap). Colormap can be web for the 216-color
“Web-safe palette”; gray for grayscale; bw for
black-and-white; or the name of a file. That file should either be a text
file (the format is described below) or a GIF file, whose global colormap
will be used. If
--colors=N
is also given, an N-sized subset of colormap will be
used.
Text colormap files use this format:
; each non-comment line represents one color, "red green blue"
; each component should be between 0 and 255
0 0 0 ; like this
255 255 255
; or use web hex notation
#ffffff ; like this
First, let's create an animation, ‘anim.gif’:
gifsicle a.gif b.gif c.gif d.gif > anim.gif
This animation will move very quickly: since we didn't specify a
delay, a browser will cycle through the frames as fast as it can. Let's slow
it down and pause .5 seconds between frames, using the
--delay option.
gifsicle --delay 50 a.gif b.gif c.gif d.gif > anim.gif
If we also want the GIF to loop three times, we can use
--loopcount:
gifsicle -d 50 --loop=3 a.gif b.gif c.gif d.gif > anim.gif
(Rather than type --delay again, we used its
short form, -d. Many options have short forms; you can
see them by running ‘gifsicle --help’. We also
abbreviated --loopcount to --loop,
which is OK since no other option starts with ‘loop’.)
To explode ‘anim.gif’ into its component frames:
gifsicle --explode anim.gif
ls anim.gif*
anim.gif anim.gif.000 anim.gif.001 anim.gif.002 anim.gif.003
To optimize ‘anim.gif’:
To change the second frame of ‘anim.gif’ to
‘x.gif’:
gifsicle -b --unoptimize -O2 anim.gif --replace "#1" x.gif
--unoptimize is used since
‘anim.gif’ was optimized in the last step. Editing individual
frames in optimized GIFs is dangerous without
--unoptimize; frames following the changed frame could
be corrupted by the change. Of course, this might be what you want.
Note that --unoptimize and
--optimize can be on simultaneously.
--unoptimize affects input GIF files, while
--optimize affects output GIF files.
To print information about the first and fourth frames of
‘anim.gif’:
gifsicle -I "#0" "#3" < anim.gif
To make black the transparent color in all the GIFs in the current
directory, and also print information about each:
gifsicle -bII --trans "#000000" *.gif
Giving -I twice forces normal output to
occur. With only one -I, the GIFs would not be
modified.
To change ‘anim.gif’ to use a 64-color subset of the
Web-safe palette:
gifsicle -b --colors=64 --use-col=web anim.gif
To make a dithered black-and-white version of
‘anim.gif’:
gifsicle --dither --use-col=bw anim.gif > anim-bw.gif
To overlay one GIF atop another -- producing a one-frame output
GIF that looks like the superposition of the two inputs -- use
gifsicle twice:
gifsicle bottom.gif top.gif | gifsicle -U "#1" > result.gif
Some optimized output GIFs may appear incorrectly on some GIF implementations
(for example, Java's); see the --careful option.
Please email suggestions, additions, patches and bugs to
ekohler@gmail.com.
For a tutorial on GIF images and animations, you might try some of the resources
listed on-line at webreference.com:
http://www.webreference.com/authoring/graphics/animation.html
Eddie Kohler <ekohler@gmail.com>
http://www.read.seas.harvard.edu/~kohler/
He wrote it.
Anne Dudfield <annied@frii.com>
http://www.frii.com/~annied/
She named it.
Hans Dinsen-Hansen <dino@danbbs.dk>
http://www.danbbs.dk/~dino/
Adaptive tree method for GIF writing.
Kornel Lesin´ski
--lossy option.
http://www.lcdf.org/gifsicle/
The gifsicle home page.
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