image_editing

v0.1.0

Comprehensive command-line tools for modifying and manipulating images, such as resize, blur, crop, flip, and many more.

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Install with OpenClaw

Best for remote or guided setup. Copy the exact prompt, then paste it into OpenClaw for lnj22/mario-coin-counting-image-editing.

Previewing Install & Setup.
Prompt PreviewInstall & Setup
Install the skill "image_editing" (lnj22/mario-coin-counting-image-editing) from ClawHub.
Skill page: https://clawhub.ai/lnj22/mario-coin-counting-image-editing
Keep the work scoped to this skill only.
After install, inspect the skill metadata and help me finish setup.
Use only the metadata you can verify from ClawHub; do not invent missing requirements.
Ask before making any broader environment changes.

Command Line

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Use the direct CLI path if you want to install manually and keep every step visible.

OpenClaw CLI

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openclaw skills install mario-coin-counting-image-editing

ClawHub CLI

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npx clawhub@latest install mario-coin-counting-image-editing
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Purpose & Capability
The name and description match the instructions (ImageMagick/convert usage). Minor inconsistencies: registry metadata lists no required binaries, yet SKILL.md explicitly requires the 'convert' binary (imagemagick). SKILL.md also claims a proprietary LICENSE.txt but no license file accompanies the skill bundle.
Instruction Scope
Runtime instructions are limited to running ImageMagick 'convert' commands on local image files and a suggestion to install imagemagick via the system package manager. There are no instructions to read unrelated files, exfiltrate data, call external endpoints, or access secrets.
Install Mechanism
No install spec is included (instruction-only). The document simply instructs the user to install imagemagick with 'sudo apt install imagemagick' if 'convert' is missing — this is a normal, low-risk recommendation and does not pull code from unknown URLs.
Credentials
The skill declares no required environment variables, credentials, or config paths, which is appropriate for a local image-processing guidance document.
Persistence & Privilege
The skill is not always-enabled and does not request any persistent privileges or modify other skills or system-wide settings. Autonomous invocation is allowed by default (platform normal), but there is nothing in the skill that suggests a need for elevated privileges.
Assessment
This skill is essentially a cheat-sheet for using ImageMagick's 'convert' tool and appears internally consistent. Before installing/using it: (1) verify you have 'convert' on PATH (run 'convert -version') — the SKILL.md expects this even though registry metadata omitted it; (2) installing imagemagick with 'sudo apt install' requires admin rights — review that package and your system policy before granting sudo; (3) inspect any convert commands before running them (wildcards and in-place conversions can overwrite files); (4) note SKILL.md's claim of a proprietary LICENSE.txt but no license file is bundled — if licensing matters to you, ask the publisher for the license text; (5) no credentials or network calls are requested by this skill, so the usual cautions about running arbitrary shell commands apply but there are no additional credential-exfiltration signals.

Like a lobster shell, security has layers — review code before you run it.

latestvk97cg7vy7962c1k3v04pttbcpd84vnb2
85downloads
0stars
1versions
Updated 2w ago
v0.1.0
MIT-0

Command-line Tools: Convert

Overview

This guide covers essential image processing operations using ImageMagick, a collection of command-line tools that can be applied to modify and manipulate images. With this toolkit, you can edit images in batch on Linux command-line.

Image Operations

Use the convert command to resize an image, blur, crop, despeckle, dither, draw on, flip, join, re-sample, and much more.

Example Usage We list a few examples of the command here to illustrate its usefulness and ease of use. To get started, let's reduce the size of our rose:

convert -resize 50% rose.jpg

You can resize all your JPEG images in a folder to a maximum dimension of 256x256 with this command:

convert -resize 256x256 *.jpg

Finally, we convert all our PNG images in a folder to the JPEG format:

convert -format jpg *.png

Here image files 1.png, 2.png, etc., are left untouched and files 1.jpg, 2.jpg, etc., are created. They are copies of their respective PNG images except are stored in the JPEG image format.

Useful image operations and their corresponding command:

-auto-orient Adjusts an image so that its orientation is suitable for viewing (i.e. top-left orientation). This operator reads and resets the EXIF image profile setting 'Orientation' and then performs the appropriate 90 degree rotation on the image to orient the image, for correct viewing.

-background <color> Set the background color. The color is specified using the format described under the -fill option. The default background color (if none is specified or found in the image) is white.

-blend <geometry> Blend an image into another by the given absolute value or percent. Blend will average the images together ('plus') according to the percentages given and each pixels transparency. If only a single percentage value is given it sets the weight of the composite or 'source' image, while the background image is weighted by the exact opposite amount. That is a -blend 30% merges 30% of the 'source' image with 70% of the 'destination' image. Thus it is equivalent to -blend 30x70%.

-blue-shift <factor> Simulate a scene at nighttime in the moonlight. Start with a factor of 1.5

-blur radius -blur radius{xsigma} Reduce image noise and reduce detail levels. Convolve the image with a Gaussian or normal distribution using the given Sigma value. The formula is: $$ G(u, v) = \frac{1}{2\pi\sigma^2}e^{-(u^2+v^2)/(2\sigma^2)} $$ The sigma value is the important argument, and determines the actual amount of blurring that will take place.

-bordercolor color Set the border color. The color is specified using the format described under the -fill option. The default border color is #DFDFDF, this shade of gray.

-border <value%> Surround the image with a border of color. value % of width is added to left/right and value % of height is added to top/bottom

-brightness-contrast brightness -brightness-contrast brightness{xcontrast}{%} Adjust the brightness and/or contrast of the image. Brightness and Contrast values apply changes to the input image. They are not absolute settings. A brightness or contrast value of zero means no change. The range of values is -100 to +100 on each. Positive values increase the brightness or contrast and negative values decrease the brightness or contrast. To control only contrast, set the brightness=0. To control only brightness, set contrast=0 or just leave it off. You may also use -channel to control which channels to apply the brightness and/or contrast change. The default is to apply the same transformation to all channels.

-channel type Specify those image color channels to which subsequent operators are limited. Choose from: Red, Green, Blue, Alpha, Gray, Cyan, Magenta, Yellow, Black, Opacity, Index, RGB, RGBA, CMYK, or CMYKA.

-contrast Enhance or reduce the image contrast.

-colorspace value Set the image colorspace.

Dependencies

Required dependencies (install if not available):

  • convert: Run sudo apt install imagemagick to install. After that, you can use convert command.

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