Image Resizer: troubleshooting and FAQ-style fixes
Common issues with Image Resizer: empty output, slow tabs, wrong encoding. Practical checks before you give up (Resize images to custom dimensions).
First: isolate the smallest failing example
Most issues become obvious when you stop trying to debug a ten-megabyte file and instead reproduce the problem on ten lines. Copy a tiny slice that still fails, paste it into Image Resizer, and iterate. This single habit fixes more “mystery bugs” than any specific setting. Advertised capabilities include custom dimensions, aspect ratio lock, batch resize.
Symptom: output looks empty or unchanged
- Confirm you actually triggered the main action (some UIs require an explicit button click after edits).
- Check whether you pasted into the correct panel (input vs output).
- Look for filters: sometimes a checkbox hides rows or strips fields you expected to keep.
Symptom: output looks “almost” right
- Compare line endings (CRLF vs LF). Editors sometimes hide the difference until deployment fails.
- Watch for smart quotes or non-breaking spaces copied from PDFs or word processors.
- If you merged or joined data, verify keys line up: one off-by-one row can make the whole table look corrupted.
Symptom: the tab is slow or freezes
- Close other heavy tabs, especially video calls and 3D demos.
- Split the job: process chunks and concatenate in a text editor if needed.
- Try a different browser if one profile has many extensions enabled.
Symptom: upload fails or file type rejected
- Confirm the extension matches the real format (rename does not change bytes).
- Try re-exporting from the source app with a simpler format.
- If corporate security blocks uploads, try pasting text instead of uploading binary.
Symptom: encoding looks like mojibake
- Re-export as UTF-8 from the source when possible.
- Avoid multiple copy-paste hops through apps that “helpfully” change encoding.
Related tools that help narrow the problem
FAQ-style fixes
I get different results on two computers. Why?
Different browsers, extensions, OS clipboard behavior, or time zones (for timestamps) can diverge. Standardize browser and inputs when you need identical output.
Should I hard refresh?
If the UI looks stale after an update, a hard refresh can help. If you fear losing work, copy your input to a notes app first.
Can I trust the preview?
Treat preview as strong evidence, not absolute proof. Open the exported artifact in the final destination app when stakes are high.
Still stuck?
Revisit Image Resizer with a minimal repro: smallest file, clearest expected vs actual, and the steps you clicked. That package is what makes feedback actionable for maintainers and for your future self.
Stretch goal: compare two outputs
Export version A and version B into separate files and diff them in your editor. That habit catches silent row drops, unexpected sorting, and whitespace-only changes that are easy to miss in a scrolling preview.
Stretch goal: sleep on it
When output is “almost” right, save your input and walk away for ten minutes. Fresh eyes spot delimiter mistakes, duplicated headers, and off-by-one joins faster than another frantic tweak cycle.
Stretch goal: teach someone else
Explain the workflow aloud to a teammate while you click. Gaps in your mental model show up immediately when you cannot justify a step.