![snagit remove background snagit remove background](https://www.revit.news/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/Snagit-Magic.png)
So the only way forward I can see is to use OCR to obtain clean text, and then put that text on a new white canvas if the need is great enough it should be possible to considerably streamline the process using scripted keyboard shortcuts as above. Yes command line, but if the images you have posted are representative of your actual source images, rather than screenshots for example, I think there is really no possibility of converting them into good quality text on a clean white background. I tried some examples, but I could not get it right.įor one image an instruction may work, but for the next one, it won't.
![snagit remove background snagit remove background](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/70/d5/46/70d54635351e1123cdfdb100136ba2d4.jpg)
![snagit remove background snagit remove background](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/ns-YaVuQRkw/hqdefault.jpg)
Depending on your exact requirements, using a macro recorder it should be possible to automate all the operations required that would otherwise have to be performed manually, including stepping to the next file in the folder to open it ready for processing.Īs for ImageMagick, I believe that is a command line tool(?) It would all depend on the parameters within which you are working, and your motivation to brainstorm and test possible solutions.Īnother possibility that might be more practical and easily realised could be to use a scripting utility such as AutoHotKey with the Abbyy Screenshot Reader to perform sequences of key strokes, and if necessary mouse operations, to one or more keyboard shortcuts.
Snagit remove background series#
If you use NConvert, there might also be possibilities of creating a script to automate a series of custom operations. There are also clipboard tools that enable multiple pieces of text to be stored for use later, if that would help. You might then be able to write those multiple instances of text to a large vertical canvas that can be batch cropped into elements. You could for example join multiple input images vertically, then use the screenshot reader to extract the text from multiple images in a single operation. No obvious simple batch process as you say, but in the absence of a better alternative, possibly with resourcefulness there might be ways of streamlining operations to create a semi-batch process? Programs like Tesseract can OCR images, however, they have to be converted to black characters on white background. Sorry for the delay: although 'Notify me' is tagged, I never get notifications.Īs for Abbyy Screenshot Reader: I know (and have) that program.