Difference between revisions of "Bitmap Graphics"

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=Revision Questions=
 
=Revision Questions=
==Ardi==
 
 
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{ What is a jpeg?
 
{ What is a jpeg?
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+ Adobe illustrator
 
+ Adobe illustrator
 
|| Correct adobe illustrator is used to create vector images
 
|| Correct adobe illustrator is used to create vector images
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==Ahsan==
 
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When are bitmap graphics used?
 
When are bitmap graphics used?
 
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- Decreases
 
- Decreases
 
|| Increasing resolution  increases number of pixels and therefore increases the amount of data stored
 
|| Increasing resolution  increases number of pixels and therefore increases the amount of data stored
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==Daniel==
 
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{ How would the color white be represented in one pixel of an image with a 2 bit color depth?  
 
{ How would the color white be represented in one pixel of an image with a 2 bit color depth?  
 
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Revision as of 14:02, 15 November 2017

Definitions

Name Definition
Bitmap image Bitmap images are stored as a series of pixels.
Pixel A pixel is a single point in a graphic image with an assigned colour. Many of them on a screen are assigned a colour in a specific place to recreate a bitmap image.

Colour Depth

Colour depth is either the number of bits used to indicate the colour of a single pixel, in a bitmap image, or the number of bits used for each colour component of a single pixel. This means the number of bits needed to code an image. For example an image will only need 1 bit colour depth for black and white, i.e. a 0 for white or 1 for black, such as the following image...

Black-White.jpg

although if an image has 24 bit colour depth, it can code up to 16777216 colours. This uses a 24bit binary number to represent each pixel, and the highest value you can represent using 24bits is 16777215 + 1 for 0. such as the following image...

Colour.jpg

Resolution

Resolution is determined by the height and width of an image file, for example:

100px-leopardpic.jpg

This square has a total of 10000 pixels because it is 100 pixels high and 100 wide. You multiply the height by the width. This image was downsized from a larger image to this resolution.

200px-leopardpic.jpg

The image above is the same image but downsized to the larger resolution of 200 x 200. This resolution is double the previous image so it looks of equal quality even though it is double the resolution.

File Size

File Size of a bitmap file links nicely to this all as it is essentially the Colour Depth multiplied by the Resolution. This is because for every pixel there needs to be a colour assigned to it. Hence, an image, 100 pixels high, 500 pixels wide, with a colour depth of 24, bits would have the size of (100*500*24=) 1,200,000 bits or (100*500*25/8=) 150,000 bytes if it would be a bitmap image.

Problems with Bitmap Graphics

One of the major problems with bitmap graphics is that when an image is zoomed into, you can see all of the pixels used for that image, hence some of the initial quality is lost, for example, here is a bitmap image when not zoomed in. This image is 100 x 100:

100px-leopardpic.jpg

However, when enlarged, what's known as 'pixelation' begins to occur, for example, in this enlarged version of the previous image. The image can also become blurry due to pixelation, this image is 100 x 100 but is been displayed at 500 x 500:

100px-leopardpic.jpg

Compared With Vector Graphics

Bitmaps are stored pixel by pixel However, in a vector graphic the image is stored be calculating the points, lines and shapes used to create the image. A drawing list is created to recreate the image. Vector graphics can be resized using mathematics so increasing the size has no effect on quality of the image.

The file size of a vector graphic can be significantly smaller than a bitmap. the drawing list is essentially the instructions to rebuild the image. However if you attempted to capture a real world photograph, you would essentially have so many shapes to represent the changes in colour that the file size might not be any smaller.

Revision Questions

Syntax error

1. What is a jpeg?

Joint Photographic Experts Group A format that uses lossy compression to store bitmap images. JPEG (pronounced "JAY-peg") files have a .jpg extension.
Joint Photographic Expo Group B format that uses lossy compression to store bitmap images. JPEG (pronounced "JAY-peg") files have a .jpg extension.

2. similiar to the gif what bitmap file format is used for moving images?

jpeg
bmp
The bmp file format stands for bitmap image file
tiff
TIFF or Tagged image file format stores still images

3. from the following What program are vector images created in?

Paint
Paint creates bitmap images
FL studios
Adobe illustrator
Correct adobe illustrator is used to create vector images
They are produced when a camera or a scanner is used and most clip art is saved as a bitmap- meaning that they can be changed and edited
They are produced when a camera or a scanner is used and most clip art is saved as a bitmap- meaning that they can not be changed and edited

4. What is a pixel?

The largest element of a picture
the smallest element of a picture
Resolution
Resolution is determined by the number of pixels in an image

5. What do you call the number of pixels in a screen ?

Pixelation
Pixelation occurs when a bitmap image is enlarged
Colour
Resolution
Pelanyo

6. What is meant by color depth ?

The Number of pixels on screen
This is known as resolution
The Number of colors that can be represented by an image
The size of the file
How good the Image looks on a scale of 1 to 10
What where you thinking?

7. What happens to the file size when you increase the resolution ?

Increases
Decreases
Increasing resolution increases number of pixels and therefore increases the amount of data stored

8. How would the color white be represented in one pixel of an image with a 2 bit color depth?

00
01
10
11

9. In a .PNG file, each pixel is usually represented with 1 to 64 bits including an extra bit. What could that extra bit be for?

additional resolution
anti-aliasing (FXAA, MSAA etc.)
Transparency
The NSA

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