On Sun, 2003-03-30 at 04:27, Thomas Speck wrote:
> On Sun, 2003-03-30 at 08:40, Metnetsky wrote:
> > I can't seem to find any good documentation/examples on GDK with
> > Python.  I'm not trying to do much, just open an image, shrink, and save
> > under a new name.  Simply put, I have a few hundred photos that need to
> > be cut in half by exactly 50%.  The program doesn't need an interface,
> > it should be run from a command prompt with a directory path passed as
> > an argument.  All images in the path are loaded and converted.  Any
> > suggestions on where/how to begin this?
> > 
> > ~ Matthew
> 
> I think what you are looking for is gtk.gdk.Pixbuf. As a starting point
> 
> import gtk
> pixbuf = gtk.gdk.pixbuf_new_from_file( 'file' )
> scaled = pixbuf.scale_simple( pixbuf.get_width()/2,
>        pixbuf.get_height()/2, gtk.gdk.INTERP_BILINEAR )
> scaled.save( 'scaled.png', 'png' )
> 
> The documenation on this topic isn't the best but maybe you should look
> here:
> http://www.gnome.org/~james/pygtk-docs/class-gdkpixbuf.html
> 
> Thomas
> 
Thanks for the tip.

I tried the above code and some variations on the theme but the Python
interpreter keeps returning "AttributeError: 'gtk.gdk.Pixbuf' object has
no attribute 'save'".  Any suggestions?  I looked through the
documentation, but it definitely lacks something to be desired.

~ Matthew

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