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All About File Formats. Mr. Butler John Jay High School Department of Technology. Why Study File Formats?. Important to recognize which formats should be used with the appropriate task Your not wasting your time spending hours working in the wrong file format
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All About File Formats Mr. Butler John Jay High School Department of Technology
Why Study File Formats? • Important to recognize which formats should be used with the appropriate task • Your not wasting your time spending hours working in the wrong file format • Help understand the different file formats and help you choose the right one for each project
Native file formats • When you save a document in the same format as the program you’re working in. • Ex. If you save a Photoshop image as a Photoshop file (instead of as a TIFF of JPEG).
Non-Native file formats • The type of file formats that each software program can create or accept • Sometime you cannot open new files in old programs • Ex. Using Microsoft Word XP at school and trying to open it at home using Microsoft Word 98
Non-Native file formats Exporting or saving as non-native file formats • Export a file or Save As with a different name and format Importing and opening non-native file formats • Importing – bringing a non-native file into an existing page of an application • May also be called insert, Get Picture, Place • Open – just as if it was its own native format, some programs may just open it!
TIFF files • TIFF is an acronym for Tagged Image File Format • Is a raster (bitmapped) file format • Almost every raster program, such as image editing or paint programs, can save as TIFF’s and can be import TIFF’s • TIFF is also the best format to use between Windows and Macintosh.
Scanning as TIFF • TIFF was originally created for scanning
LZW compression • Compression means the information in the file is squished so the file takes up less disk space. • There are two generic types of compression: • Lossy – some data in the files is lost • Lossless – no data is lost during compression • LWZ stands for Lempel, Ziv, and Welch (the three creators of compression)
EPS files (vector) Encapsulated PostScript
DCS files • The DCS format is an acronym for Desktop Color Separation • DCS was developed by Quark to allow programs to read CMYK files correctly.
PICT files (Macintosh) • PICT is short for “picture” • Created by Apple for images on the first Macintosh systems • A PICT file can contain both vector and raster information
BMP files (Windows) • Windows has a BMP format (windows Bitmap) • BMP files are primarily used to create the wallpaper images that fill the background of the Windows screen
WMF files (windows) • The WMF stands for Windows Metafile • Is a vector format for use on the Windows platform • Should only be used with multimedia programs (only when needed)
GIF file format • GIF is an acronym for Graphical Interchange Format • Pronounced “gif”, not “jif” because it stands for “graphical” • GIF format can be displayed on any computer • GIF was originally created by CompuServe Online for transferring images online
GIF file format • GIF images are found everywhere on the World Wide Web • GIF image must use the Index color mode, which has a maximum of 256 colors (8-bit)
PNG file format • PNG is an acronym for Portable Network Graphic • Pronounced “ping” • Similar to GIF • PNG files can support 24-bit color (millions of colors) and transparency without jagged edges
JPEG files • JPEG is an acronym for Joint Photographic Experts Group • Pronounced “jay peg” • JPEG is a compression format that makes images into smaller files • JPEG is a lossy compression • Many stock photo companies save their images with JPEG compression
PDF files • PDF is an acronym for Portable Document Format • It is a compression scheme that embeds, right within the file • All the necessary information to view a single document is present: • Text, images, page breaks, fonts, etc.
Any Questions Take a moment and finish up any blank questions on your notes sheet.