How can I determine the size of an image from the command line?

Solution 1:

Use the command identify, which is part of ImageMagick.

Examples:

$ identify ZEAKR.jpg 
ZEAKR.jpg JPEG 400x600 400x600+0+0 8-bit DirectClass 49.9KB 0.000u 0:00.000

or

$ identify -verbose ZEAKR.jpg 
Image: ZEAKR.jpg
  Format: JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group JFIF format)
  Class: DirectClass
  Geometry: 400x600+0+0
  Resolution: 72x72
  Print size: 5.55556x8.33333
  Units: Undefined
  Type: TrueColor
  Endianess: Undefined
  Colorspace: RGB
  Depth: 8-bit
  Channel depth:
    red: 8-bit
    green: 8-bit
    blue: 8-bit
  Channel statistics:
    Red:
      min: 0 (0)
      max: 255 (1)
      mean: 37.8679 (0.148501)
      standard deviation: 83.5317 (0.327575)
      kurtosis: 1.46576
      skewness: 1.83875
    Green:
      min: 0 (0)
      max: 255 (1)
      mean: 60.6554 (0.237864)
      standard deviation: 54.9167 (0.21536)
      kurtosis: 1.74308
      skewness: 1.84745
    Blue:
      min: 0 (0)
      max: 255 (1)
      mean: 67.6817 (0.265418)
      standard deviation: 28.1072 (0.110224)
      kurtosis: 0.599932
      skewness: -0.97633
  Image statistics:
    Overall:
      min: 0 (0)
      max: 255 (1)
      mean: 55.4017 (0.217261)
      standard deviation: 59.9539 (0.235113)
      kurtosis: 2.34592
      skewness: 1.64301
  Rendering intent: Undefined
  Interlace: None
  Background color: white
  Border color: rgb(223,223,223)
  Matte color: grey74
  Transparent color: black
  Compose: Over
  Page geometry: 400x600+0+0
  Dispose: Undefined
  Iterations: 0
  Compression: JPEG
  Quality: 96
  Orientation: Undefined
  Properties:
    date:create: 2012-06-23T11:22:15-05:00
    date:modify: 2012-06-23T11:22:15-05:00
    jpeg:colorspace: 2
    jpeg:sampling-factor: 1x1,1x1,1x1
    signature: 2beab0779fc657fb62e8609b600d90d1e502f614794e497299ffaa28d145408e
  Artifacts:
    verbose: true
  Tainted: False
  Filesize: 49.9KBB
  Number pixels: 240KB
  Pixels per second: 24MB
  User time: 0.000u
  Elapsed time: 0:01.009
  Version: ImageMagick 6.6.9-7 2012-04-30 Q16 http://www.imagemagick.org

Solution 2:

For everyone else looking for a solution that is included in (most) distributions by default, here it is:

Command: $ file <imagename>

Output: <imagename>: PNG image data, 100 x 10, 8-bit/color RGB, non-interlaced where 100 x 10 represents width x height respectively.

The file command shows dimensions of many image types. I add this solution because I generally try to avoid installing additional software, and ImageMagick (although awesome!) is using a sledgehammer to crack a nut here.