Convert a bunch of BMP files to JPEG on Linux
Solution 1:
You can use ImageMagick's mogrify tool
mogrify -format jpg *.bmp
Solution 2:
You are likely to have ImageMagick installed on Ubuntu.
That can do,
convert filename.bmp filename.jpg
update:
The mogrify
(answered by hyperslug
and referred by cjm
) is also a good option.
Use the mogrify program to resize an image, blur, crop, despeckle, dither, draw on, flip, join, re-sample, and much more.
This tool is similiar to convert except that the original image file is overwritten
(unless you change the file suffix with the-format
option) with any changes you request.
Solution 3:
Let me do a little change to salmonmoose answer:
for i in `ls *.bmp`; do convert $i $i.jpg; done
The above works but generates files named "bmp.jpg". You can get .jpg files with this command:
for i in *.bmp; do convert ${i} ${i%bmp}jpg; done
See man bash
for details of the for
command. The ${i%bmp}
part means the string "${i}" without the "bmp" substring at the end.
There are other operations to transform the string in "${i}". "$i" is a shorthand for "${i}". The ls *.bmp
part in salmonmoose answer means "execute ls *.bmp
, then the for i
part assigns each string separated by spaces to i
". The same is achieved by *.bmp
because it matches all file names in the directory.
There is a drawback with for
- if the files in your directory have spaces in the name, for example "wedding picture 1.bmp", it will be assigned 3 times to the i
var, performing these commands:
convert wedding wedding.jpg
convert picture picture.jpg
convert 1.bmp 1.bmp.jpg
In my answer also the match "${i%bmp}" fails.
But there is a solution - you can use the find
command instead. See man find
for details. You should type something like the following (please check the syntax with the man page before trying it):
find -name *.bmp -type f -exec convert '{}' '{}'.jpg \;
(I am not very sure of the name part, and I have some doubt in the -exec
part, see man find
first)
If you want to join all the images in one .jpg file, you can concatenate them with other filter, as the one mentioned in the first answer.
Solution 4:
for i in `ls *.bmp`; do convert $i $i.jpg; done
Yes, this will make a bunch of files called filename.bmp.jpg but it'll do the job.