Absolute Beginner's Guide to Digital Photography

(Ann) #1
CHAPTER 7 FILES AND FILE FORMATS 87

FIGURE 7.3
High compres-
sion in JPEG
files creates visi-
ble banding
and image arti-
facts in areas
with no tonal
variation.


■ Excellent image fidelity.The JPEG format was designed
to be fast and provide high fidelity in compressed images.
This format was also designed to be
adjustable so that users could “dial in” the
desired level of compression.
■ Platform independent. The format is
simple enough to be included among
many different operating systems and soft-
ware programs.
■ Flexible.Almost any continuous-tone still
image can be compressed in JPEG regard-
less of color, color space, or size. JPEG also
supports grayscale. JPEG also is not limited
by a specific range of colors, such as GIF,
with its 256-color palette.
■ Compression or no compression. JPEG provides several compression
methods, including a user-defined, scalable compression method.
■ Sequential or progressive load. Aside from traditional sequential open-
ing, images can be saved in Progressive mode. This popular format for the
Web loads the image in a series of steps, with each step adding detail.

The JPEG image compression scheme includes two compression methods: lossy and
lossless. The lossy method uses a method called DCT (Discrete Cosine Transform) to
compress specific size blocks of an image (explained later). The lossless portion of
JPEG uses a predictive method for lossless compression, but is rarely implemented.

Do not use the JPEG for-
mat for computer-gener-
ated images, such as
those used for 3D com-
puter graphics. The com-
pression algorithm will introduce
artifacts and noise in the image.
JPEG should only be used for true
continuous tone images.

caution

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