That is usually called the resultant vector.
It is a displacement vector.
Vector addition derives a new vector from two or more vectors, and vector resolution is breaking a vector down into its two or more components.
It has magnitude 0 and a direction and obeys vector laws, so is a vector
Still another velocity vector (or a zero vector).
Lossy
they are lossless...
Lossless. Compression techniques do not remove detail from the image.
File compression uses software algorithms to reduce file size by reducing the bit-rate of a file. Lossy compression takes it a bit further and lowers the quality of thr file to make it even smaller. Lossy compression is commonly used for media files, but would not be appropriate for other types of files.
Vector files optimize jpg files.
Pict files can use 2 different forms of compression. 1- RLE Compression (the default) is lossless. 2- JPEG compression (only on some systems/graphics programmes) is lossy.
The lossy compression in the JPEG files generates a blur effect near the edges in the image. The stronger the compression, the more visible the blur effect.
Something that doesn't exist. JPEGs can't carry vector data. EPS files, and WMF if you hate your print provider, carry vector data.
PSD files are photoshop "work in progress" files. Other than the results of editing, you get out exactly what you put into it. If you want the files to be lossy, you make photoshop lose whatever you want it to. Otherwise, you don't, and nothing gets lost, making it lossless.Open in Google Docs ViewerOpen link in new tabOpen link in new windowOpen link in new incognito windowDownload fileCopy link addressEdit PDF File on PDFescape.com
plane waves in lossy dielectrics
JPG's not too bad but GIF is terribly lossy
Lossy= You lose somedata Lossless= You dont