

> same2-from-jpg.png PNG 640x400 640x400+0+0 8-bit DirectClass 1.64KB 0.010u 0:00.000Ībove we convert the jpg back to png and then compare it with the original, and it still differs.Īnyway, maybe this will give you some insight. $ compare -identify -metric MAE same2.png same2-from-jpg.png null This is definitly not my area, but I don't think converting the pictures to the same format would make any difference since the compression (or whatever makes the pictures different) already is applied to the image. So, when comparing against jpeg we get a difference, even though the pictures "look" the same. $ compare -identify -metric MAE same1.png same2.jpg null
Pixcompare mac full#
$ compare -identify -metric MAE same1.png same2.bmp null Find duplicate and similar photos in the camera roll, any album, or the full photo library.
Pixcompare mac mac os x#
> diff.png PNG 640x400 640x400+0+0 8-bit DirectClass 6.01KB 0.000u 0:00.009Įdit, good point by DigitalTrauma, comparing between different formats/compression algorithms may be a problem, $ compare -identify -metric MAE same1.png same2.xcf null System - Mac OS X 10.10.5 or later, including OS X 10.15 'Catalina' Display - 1024 x 768 display resolution, millions of colors Free hard disk space - 4.


$ compare -identify -metric MAE same1.png diff.png null Here’s the regular steps to uninstall PiXcompare on Mac: Step 1: Quit PiXcompare as well as its related process(es) if they are still. Pros are it's fast, stable even on very highly populated folders, can do cross folder, can vary compare based criteria, simple to use after you've done it once. In most circumstances you can take the drag-and-drop way to delete PiXcompare from your computer. Prior to that used/tried about a half dozen other apps. > same2.png PNG 640x400 640x400+0+0 8-bit DirectClass 1.64KB 0.010u 0:00.000 Most Mac apps are self-contained, and the trash-to-delete option works on all versions of Mac OS X and later. I'm not that familiar with comparing images, but I tried creating some samples and ran following snippets, $ compare -identify -metric MAE same1.png same2.png null
Pixcompare mac for mac#
Available for mac and all modern Linux distributions. How about using compare from the ImageMagic software-suite ( ). PixCompare will compare picture files to search for duplicates or similar pictures in a large collection of picture files.
