Image Resizing Made Easy with PHP

Image Resizing Made Easy with PHP

Tutorial Details
  • Estimated Completion Time: 40 minutes
  • Difficulty: Intermediate
  • Technology: PHP 5

Ever wanted an all purpose, easy to use method of resizing your images in PHP? Well that’s what PHP classes are for – reusable pieces of functionality that we call to do the dirty work behind the scenes. We’re going to learn how to create our own class that will be well constructed, as well as expandable. Resizing should be easy. How easy? How about three steps!


Introduction

To give you a quick glimpse at what we’re trying to achieve with our class, the class should be:

  • Easy to use
  • Format independent. I.E., open, resize, and save a number of different images formats.
  • Intelligent sizing – No image distortion!

Note: This isn’t a tutorial on how to create classes and objects, and although this skill would help, it isn’t necessary in order to follow this tutorial.

There’s a lot to cover – Let’s begin.


Step 1 Preparation

We’ll start off easy. In your working directory create two files: one called index.php, the other resize-class.php


Step 2 Calling the Object

To give you an idea of what we’re trying to achieve, we’ll begin by coding the calls we’ll use to resize the images. Open your index.php file and add the following code.

As you can see, there is a nice logic to what we’re doing. We open the image file, we set the dimensions we want to resize the image to, and the type of resize.
Then we save the image, choosing the image format we want and the image quality. Save and close your index.php file.

		// *** Include the class
		include("resize-class.php");

		// *** 1) Initialize / load image
		$resizeObj = new resize('sample.jpg');

		// *** 2) Resize image (options: exact, portrait, landscape, auto, crop)
		$resizeObj -> resizeImage(150, 100, 'crop');

		// *** 3) Save image
		$resizeObj -> saveImage('sample-resized.gif', 100);

From the code above you can see we’re opening a jpg file but saving a gif. Remember, it’s all about flexibility.


Step 3 Class Skeleton

It’s Object-Oriented Programming (OOP) that makes this sense of ease possible. Think of a class like a pattern; you can encapsulate the data – another jargon term that really just means hiding the data. We can then reuse this class over and over without the need to rewrite any of the resizing code – you only need to call the appropriate methods just as we did in step two. Once our pattern has been created, we create instances of this pattern, called objects.

“The construct function, known as a constructor, is a special class method that gets called by the class when you create a new object.”

Let’s begin creating our resize class. Open your resize-class.php file. Below is a really basic class skeleton structure which I’ve named ‘resize’. Note the class variable comment line; this is were we’ll start adding our important class variables later.

The construct function, known as a constructor, is a special class method (the term “method” is the same as function, however, when talking about classes and objects the term method is often used) that gets called by the class when you create a new object. This makes it suitable for us to do some initializing – which we’ll do in the next step.

		Class resize
		{
			// *** Class variables

			public function __construct()
			{

			}
		}

Note that’s a double underscore for the construct method.


Step 4 The Constructor

We’re going to modify the constructor method above. Firstly, we’ll pass in the filename (and path) of our image to be resized. We’ll call this variable $fileName.

We need to open the file passed in with PHP (more specifically the PHP GD Library) so PHP can read the image. We’re doing this with the custom method ‘openImage’. I’ll get to how this method
works in a moment, but for now, we need to save the result as a class variable. A class variable is just a variable – but it’s specific to that class. Remember the class variable comment I mentioned previously? Add ‘image’ as a private variable by typing ‘private $image;’. By setting the variable as ‘Private’ you’re setting the scope of that variable so it can only be accessed by the class. From now on we can make a call to our opened image, known as a resource, which we will be doing later when we resize.

While we’re at it, let’s store the height and width of the image. I have a feeling these will be useful later.

You should now have the following.

		Class resize
		{
			// *** Class variables
			private $image;
			private $width;
			private $height;

			function __construct($fileName)
			{
			    // *** Open up the file
			    $this->image = $this->openImage($fileName);

			    // *** Get width and height
			    $this->width  = imagesx($this->image);
			    $this->height = imagesy($this->image);
			}
		}

Methods imagesx and imagesy are built in functions that are part of the GD library. They retrieve the width and height of your image, respectively.


Step 5 Opening the Image

In the previous step, we call the custom method openImage. In this step we’re going to create that method. We want the script to do our thinking for us, so depending on what file type is passed in, the script should determine what GD Library function it calls to open the image. This is easily achieved by comparing the files extension with a switch statement.

We pass in our file we want to resize and return that files resource.

		private function openImage($file)
		{
		    // *** Get extension
		    $extension = strtolower(strrchr($file, '.'));

		    switch($extension)
		    {
		        case '.jpg':
		        case '.jpeg':
		            $img = @imagecreatefromjpeg($file);
		            break;
		        case '.gif':
		            $img = @imagecreatefromgif($file);
		            break;
		        case '.png':
		            $img = @imagecreatefrompng($file);
		            break;
		        default:
		            $img = false;
		            break;
		    }
		    return $img;
		}

Step 6 How to Resize

This is where the love happens. This step is really just an explanation of what we’re going to do – so no homework here. In the next step, we’re going to create a public method that we’ll call to perform our resize; so it makes sense to pass in the width and height, as well as information about how we want to resize the image. Let’s talk about this for a moment. There will be scenarios where you would like to resize an image to an exact size. Great, let’s include this. But there will also be times when you have to resize hundreds of images and each image has a different aspect ratio – think portrait images. Resizing these to an exact size will cause severe distortion.If we take a look at our options to prevent distortion we can:

  1. Resize the image as close as we can to our new image dimensions, while still keeping the aspect ratio.
  2. Resize the image as close as we can to our new image dimensions and crop the remainder.

Both options are viable, depending on your needs.

Yep. we’re going to attempt to handle all of the above. To recap, we’re going to provide options to:

  1. Resize by exact width/height. (exact)
  2. Resize by width – exact width will be set, height will be adjusted according to aspect ratio. (landscape)
  3. Resize by height – like Resize by Width, but the height will be set and width adjusted dynamically. (portrait)
  4. Auto determine options 2 and 3. If you’re looping through a folder with different size photos, let the script determine how to handle this. (auto)
  5. Resize, then crop. This is my favourite. Exact size, no distortion. (crop)

Step 7 Resizing. Let’s do it!

There are two parts to the resize method. The first is getting the optimal width and height for our new image by creating some custom methods – and of course passing in our resize ‘option’ as described above. The width and height are returned as an array and set to their respective variables. Feel free to ‘pass as reference’- but I’m not a huge fan of that.

The second part is what performs the actual resize. In order to keep this tutorial size down, I’ll let you read up on the following GD functions:

We also save the output of the imagecreatetruecolor method (a new true color image) as a class variable. Add ‘private $imageResized;’ with your other class variables.

Resizing is performed by a PHP module known as the GD Library. Many of the methods we’re using are provided by this library.

		// *** Add to class variables
		private $imageResized;
		public function resizeImage($newWidth, $newHeight, $option="auto")
		{

			// *** Get optimal width and height - based on $option
			$optionArray = $this->getDimensions($newWidth, $newHeight, strtolower($option));

			$optimalWidth  = $optionArray['optimalWidth'];
			$optimalHeight = $optionArray['optimalHeight'];

			// *** Resample - create image canvas of x, y size
			$this->imageResized = imagecreatetruecolor($optimalWidth, $optimalHeight);
			imagecopyresampled($this->imageResized, $this->image, 0, 0, 0, 0, $optimalWidth, $optimalHeight, $this->width, $this->height);

			// *** if option is 'crop', then crop too
			if ($option == 'crop') {
				$this->crop($optimalWidth, $optimalHeight, $newWidth, $newHeight);
			}
		}

Step 8 The Decision Tree

The more work you do now, the less you have to do when you resize. This method chooses the route to take, with the goal of getting the optimal resize width and height based on your resize option. It’ll call the appropriate method, of which we’ll be creating in the next step.

		private function getDimensions($newWidth, $newHeight, $option)
		{

		   switch ($option)
		    {
		        case 'exact':
		            $optimalWidth = $newWidth;
		            $optimalHeight= $newHeight;
		            break;
		        case 'portrait':
		            $optimalWidth = $this->getSizeByFixedHeight($newHeight);
		            $optimalHeight= $newHeight;
		            break;
		        case 'landscape':
		            $optimalWidth = $newWidth;
		            $optimalHeight= $this->getSizeByFixedWidth($newWidth);
		            break;
		        case 'auto':
		            $optionArray = $this->getSizeByAuto($newWidth, $newHeight);
					$optimalWidth = $optionArray['optimalWidth'];
					$optimalHeight = $optionArray['optimalHeight'];
		            break;
				case 'crop':
		            $optionArray = $this->getOptimalCrop($newWidth, $newHeight);
					$optimalWidth = $optionArray['optimalWidth'];
					$optimalHeight = $optionArray['optimalHeight'];
		            break;
		    }
			return array('optimalWidth' => $optimalWidth, 'optimalHeight' => $optimalHeight);
		}

Step 9 Optimal Dimensions

We’ve already discussed what these four methods do. They’re just basic maths, really, that calculate our best fit.

		private function getSizeByFixedHeight($newHeight)
		{
		    $ratio = $this->width / $this->height;
		    $newWidth = $newHeight * $ratio;
		    return $newWidth;
		}

		private function getSizeByFixedWidth($newWidth)
		{
		    $ratio = $this->height / $this->width;
		    $newHeight = $newWidth * $ratio;
		    return $newHeight;
		}

		private function getSizeByAuto($newWidth, $newHeight)
		{
		    if ($this->height < $this->width)
		    // *** Image to be resized is wider (landscape)
		    {
		        $optimalWidth = $newWidth;
		        $optimalHeight= $this->getSizeByFixedWidth($newWidth);
		    }
		    elseif ($this->height > $this->width)
		    // *** Image to be resized is taller (portrait)
		    {
		        $optimalWidth = $this->getSizeByFixedHeight($newHeight);
		        $optimalHeight= $newHeight;
		    }
			else
		    // *** Image to be resizerd is a square
		    {
				if ($newHeight < $newWidth) {
					$optimalWidth = $newWidth;
					$optimalHeight= $this->getSizeByFixedWidth($newWidth);
				} else if ($newHeight > $newWidth) {
					$optimalWidth = $this->getSizeByFixedHeight($newHeight);
				    $optimalHeight= $newHeight;
				} else {
					// *** Sqaure being resized to a square
					$optimalWidth = $newWidth;
					$optimalHeight= $newHeight;
				}
		    }

			return array('optimalWidth' => $optimalWidth, 'optimalHeight' => $optimalHeight);
		}

		private function getOptimalCrop($newWidth, $newHeight)
		{

			$heightRatio = $this->height / $newHeight;
			$widthRatio  = $this->width /  $newWidth;

			if ($heightRatio < $widthRatio) {
				$optimalRatio = $heightRatio;
			} else {
				$optimalRatio = $widthRatio;
			}

			$optimalHeight = $this->height / $optimalRatio;
			$optimalWidth  = $this->width  / $optimalRatio;

			return array('optimalWidth' => $optimalWidth, 'optimalHeight' => $optimalHeight);
		}

Step 10 Crop

If you opted in for a crop – that is, you’ve used the crop option, then you have one more little step. We’re going to crop the image from the
center. Cropping is a very similar process to resizing but with a couple more sizing parameters passed in.

		private function crop($optimalWidth, $optimalHeight, $newWidth, $newHeight)
		{
			// *** Find center - this will be used for the crop
			$cropStartX = ( $optimalWidth / 2) - ( $newWidth /2 );
			$cropStartY = ( $optimalHeight/ 2) - ( $newHeight/2 );

			$crop = $this->imageResized;
			//imagedestroy($this->imageResized);

			// *** Now crop from center to exact requested size
			$this->imageResized = imagecreatetruecolor($newWidth , $newHeight);
			imagecopyresampled($this->imageResized, $crop , 0, 0, $cropStartX, $cropStartY, $newWidth, $newHeight , $newWidth, $newHeight);
		}

Step 11 Save the Image

We’re getting there; almost done. It’s now time to save the image. We pass in the path, and the image quality we would like ranging from 0-100, 100 being the best, and call the appropriate method. A couple of things to note about the image quality: JPG uses a scale of 0-100, 100 being the best. GIF images don’t have an image quality setting. PNG’s do, but they use the scale 0-9, 0 being the best. This isn’t good as we can’t expect ourselves to remember this every time we want to save an image. We do a bit of magic to standardize everything.

		public function saveImage($savePath, $imageQuality="100")
		{
			// *** Get extension
        	$extension = strrchr($savePath, '.');
        	$extension = strtolower($extension);

			switch($extension)
			{
				case '.jpg':
				case '.jpeg':
					if (imagetypes() & IMG_JPG) {
						imagejpeg($this->imageResized, $savePath, $imageQuality);
					}
		            break;

				case '.gif':
					if (imagetypes() & IMG_GIF) {
						imagegif($this->imageResized, $savePath);
					}
					break;

				case '.png':
					// *** Scale quality from 0-100 to 0-9
					$scaleQuality = round(($imageQuality/100) * 9);

					// *** Invert quality setting as 0 is best, not 9
					$invertScaleQuality = 9 - $scaleQuality;

					if (imagetypes() & IMG_PNG) {
						imagepng($this->imageResized, $savePath, $invertScaleQuality);
					}
					break;

				// ... etc

				default:
					// *** No extension - No save.
					break;
			}

			imagedestroy($this->imageResized);
		}

Now is also a good time to destroy our image resource to free up some memory. If you were to use this in production, it might also be a good idea to capture and return the result of the saved image.


Conclusion

Well that’s it, folks. Thank you for following this tutorial, I hope you find it useful. I’d appreciate your feedback, via the comments below.

Add Comment

Discussion 159 Comments

Comment Page 3 of 3 1 2 3
  1. mudin says:

    Oh very good, thank you for tutorials.. this very useful for my projects..

  2. tutkun says:

    Thank you very much!

  3. WF says:

    I am using the original download (version 1.0 released 17-Jan-10) and everything works perfectly (thanks by the way…this looks like it will be very useful). i tested it on a variety of small/normal jpg images. My problem came when i tried it on a very large (12mega-pixel) image just for grins. My upload script successfully got the file onto my server (no file-size issues) but when it gets to the portion of the code that used this class, i end up on a blank screen. It seems that somewhere the class is failing (presumably due to the large file-size and either a php or apache configuration i need to change or other issue)…but there is no error message or anything else thrown from the class. What can i do to detect whether the re-size was successful? I am okay with just displaying an error message…i understand that it is a bit extreme to expect the server to re-size such a large image…i just need to know how to generate an error so i can warn the user appropriately. Thanks!!

    • James says:

      Have the same problem using this class and temporary fixed it by setting a limit of 4 MB to the picture.

      You could do somehing like:

      $srcOfFile = “myRelativePath/file.jpg”
      $fileSize = filesize($srcOfFile);

      if($fileSize > 4194304){ // Bigger than 4 MB
      echo “ERROR”;
      } else{
      // Use this class for resizing
      }

      If anyone has a solution that also provides big images to resize, please let me know.

    • James says:

      I found a solution:

      “=> memory_limit : Maximum amount of memory a script may consume (default 8MB)”

      You have to overwrite this default value either by Htaccess:

      - “RewriteEngine on
      - php_value memory_limit 200M”

      or in the php.ini file..

  4. 5ulo says:

    I got this class working on our CMS. Works great (thanks for that), but each time I refresh webpage with resized image is the image re-sized and re-saved again. If there will be 100 people on the website and each one hits F5, what would happen? Is there some way to check existing resized image (width, height.. etc) and prevent resaving if the image options are the same? I’m php beginner so please be nice to me :))))
    Thank

  5. niki says:

    that was awesome! Tnx so much :)))

  6. Nagaraju says:

    that was awesome!

  7. sgio says:

    thank you for gret tutorials. It is easy to understand.
    thx ^^

    I am a foreigner.

  8. Juan says:

    Thanks, very much, is usefull the class.

  9. baambaam says:

    “Warning: imagesx(): supplied argument is not a valid Image resource in /home/(…)/resize.php on line 34″

    I have this warning and more but all are show by bad resource verification of images. Anybody have any solution for this?

  10. Aravind says:

    I love you man…. best script i ever found..

  11. aashipathan says:

    Hi,
    Thanks for sharing this tutorial very nice

  12. Maroun says:

    this is really the best image resizer on the fly php script I have ever used thanks you a lot!!!

  13. Denis says:

    Hi there are problem if upload a image with a form
    whit this code:
    if($_FILES['img']['name'] != “”){

    // *** 1) Initialise / load image
    $resizeObj = new resize($_FILES['img']['tmp_name']);

    // *** 2) Resize image (options: exact, portrait, landscape, auto, crop)
    $resizeObj -> resizeImage(200, 200, ‘crop’);

    // *** 3) Save image
    $resizeObj -> saveImage($_FILES['img']['name'], 100);
    }

    there are problems:

    Warning: imagesx(): supplied argument is not a valid Image resource

    can anyone have got same problem?

    • Denis says:

      I dont know if other user risolved this problem, but after reading tutorials carefully, there is a problem.
      A class required a recource then before upload a file, verify if exist and then resize the image.

    • Ektoer says:

      The problem is:
      $resizeObj = new resize($_FILES['img']['tmp_name']); if you (by any means) print the ‘tmp_name’ of your file, you’ll get something like this: php/kodsaoov.dat or something, this is just a temporary placeholder for the file on the server, and of course, is not a valid image. this class(which by the way works perfectly for me) uses a string with the path of the image you’r using, given that it has been uploaded earlier on your server.

      Look for a solution to upload the image before resizing it, get the path and correct filename and then resize it…

      Hope this helps…

      Thanks

  14. od3n says:

    thanks for the tutorial! was looking for this!

  15. Larry says:

    Can someone tell me how to use this with a form?

  16. Neha says:

    But it is not working fine for PNG,Image is getting resized but not transparent.
    Kindly help me,what to do to resolve it??

  17. dlnco says:

    Hi guys,

    Great class. But it isnt working for parts of my images. If i set this up on a local machine everything works great, but if i upload it to my server only the first feed of images are processed and the other two feeds of images give me back several error for each image (see below). Imagepath are stored in my database and grabbed by the script using a while loop. I also tried to set allow_url_fopen to on, but this doesnt seem to help.

    The odd thing is that its processing parts of all the images, but trowing errors at me on others.

    Could somebody support me with this?

    the errors i get:

    Warning: getimagesize() [function.getimagesize]: URL file-access is disabled in the server configuration in /home/admin/domains/domain.com/public_html/themes/feeds/resize-class.php on line 42

    Warning: getimagesize(http://static.fonq.nl/data/producten/19863-groot.jpg) [function.getimagesize]: failed to open stream: no suitable wrapper could be found in /home/admin/domains/domain.com/public_html/themes/feeds/resize-class.php on line 42

    Warning: imagesx(): supplied argument is not a valid Image resource in /home/admin/domains/domain.com/public_html/themes/feeds/resize-class.php on line 34

    Warning: imagesy(): supplied argument is not a valid Image resource in /home/admin/domains/domain.com/public_html/themes/feeds/resize-class.php on line 35

    Warning: Division by zero in /home/admin/domains/domain.com/public_html/themes/feeds/resize-class.php on line 119

    Warning: imagecreatetruecolor() [function.imagecreatetruecolor]: Invalid image dimensions in /home/admin/domains/domain.com/public_html/themes/feeds/resize-class.php on line 65

    Warning: imagecopyresampled(): supplied argument is not a valid Image resource in /home/admin/domains/domain.com/public_html/themes/feeds/resize-class.php on line 66

    Warning: imagejpeg(): supplied argument is not a valid Image resource in /home/admin/domains/domain.com/public_html/themes/feeds/resize-class.php on line 206

    Warning: imagedestroy(): supplied argument is not a valid Image resource in /home/admin/domains/domain.com/public_html/themes/feeds/resize-class.php on line 235

  18. mhmd says:

    thanks a lot for that great job

    but the class saved the image as a black background !!!!

  19. James says:

    Hello,

    First of all, great script!

    Secondly, I’d like to ask for some help. I’m creating thumbnail pictures using this script in a foreach loop.
    Now it should loop 10 times, because the array has 10 values.. (The loop works perfekty without the script.)

    The first 6 pictures are created successfully, but after that it seems the script has stopped.
    And doesn’t through any errors..

    Thanks for help!

  20. Ryan Jansen says:

    Hi everyone, thanks for the tuts
    I’ve problem here, why I can’t resize picture with width/height over 3000px?

  21. nicky says:

    This is a good, clear tutorial overall BUT, there is a major design problem!

    If you want to do a good OO programming, you have to be extremely careful on how you name you classes, methods and everything else!
    Avoid, as much as you can, making a class out of an action. The action has to be an internal method (in most cases) of the object.

    You can clearly see the problem here with the methods: resizeImage and saveImage, which are applied to an object of type … resize ?! It’s really confusing to my mind. I don’t know if you see where I’m getting to but well, let me tell you how I would have named them things myself!

    My stream of thoughts would be as follows: I am willing to make images resizable, okay, then I should have two choices doing it with PHP, whether making a plain old script which calls functions in a row and does the job at the end of the last line of code, or, do it with an Object Oriented approach (which is our interest here) and consider the fact that the action needed and “resizing”, okay, but resizing what? images! Alright, then I may create a class named “Image” which contains a public method called “resize”, and “save”, and “whatever you want to add as an internal functionality applied to the image object”.

    That’s all folks.

  22. somnath Shinde says:

    Thanks for nice class..

    and it work fine as well resize image as per set size..

    And that class is easy to use as compares to other classes……….

    Thanks Again…

  23. Gabriel says:

    Thanks you very much! very helpful.

  24. Julius says:

    Thank you a lot, very simple and useful!!!

  25. JDub says:

    You can easily make this function allow for resizing of transparent background PNG images. For the resizeImage() function, use this code, instead of what is in there by default:

    public function resizeImage($newWidth, $newHeight, $option=”auto”)
    {
    // *** Get optimal width and height – based on $option
    $optionArray = $this->getDimensions($newWidth, $newHeight, $option);

    $optimalWidth = $optionArray['optimalWidth'];
    $optimalHeight = $optionArray['optimalHeight'];

    // *** Resample – create image canvas of x, y size
    $this->imageResized = imagecreatetruecolor($optimalWidth, $optimalHeight);

    // *** EDIT BY JDUB – add transparent background, for png images
    //2. Create an alpha-transparent color and fill the image with it */
    imagealphablending($this->imageResized, false);
    imagesavealpha($this->imageResized, true);
    $bg = imagecolorallocatealpha($this->imageResized, 0, 0, 0, 127);
    imagefilledrectangle($this->imageResized, 0, 0, $optimalWidth, $optimalHeight, $bg);
    imagecolortransparent($this->imageResized, $bg);
    // *** END EDIT BY JDUB

    imagecopyresampled($this->imageResized, $this->image, 0, 0, 0, 0, $optimalWidth, $optimalHeight, $this->width, $this->height);

    // *** if option is ‘crop’, then crop too
    if ($option == ‘crop’) {
    $this->crop($optimalWidth, $optimalHeight, $newWidth, $newHeight);
    }
    }

Comment Page 3 of 3 1 2 3

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