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Image Files | Image Formats |
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Image Formats
Displaying In-Line Images
The popular browsers support only a limited
number of graphics file formats for in-line images,
with the most common being GIF and JPEG.
For graphics created on a PC,
files can often be saved in a
BMP format, but sometimes the software will not let you save the work as
GIF or JPEG.
(This restriction was more common a few years ago than it is today.)
You don't need to worry about the technical differences between
BMP and JPEG and GIF formats;
you only need to know that
there are programs available that will convert from the BMP
format to either GIF or JPEG.
Displaying External Images
Web browsers are more flexible in the formats they can display as external images because these are often displayed using separate "Helper Applications" that can be tailored to deal with a particular format. Provided a program exists (and runs on your computer) that can display the format, it is likely that the browser can be configured to display that format by launching the helper application. For example, it is very common in scientific and technical settings to encounter images written in Postscript format. (Postscript files commonly have a .ps or .eps extension in their names.) A browser like Explorer cannot display Postscript directly, but it can be configured such that when it encounters a Postscript file it launches a helper application that displays the file in a separate window.
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