click on it and put it in the recycle bin. or, select it and press delete
save them as a file you can edit edit them then when you are finished save them as a gif file again
Yes, Adobe Photoshop does support GIF images. GIF (Graphics Interchange Format) is a popular image format that supports both static images and animations. In Photoshop, you can open and edit GIF files just like any other image format. You can also create and edit GIF animations using Photoshop's animation tools. Thanks!
A GIF file (graphics interchange format) is a simple, low quality image file or animation. Most raster image programs can open and edit GIF images, but GIF animations acn only be edited by programs specifically capable of doing so. GIF files can be viewed by many different programs, usually any program that can display an image file will allow you to see a GIF.
You go to start->search->type *.gif
yes, it stands for Graphic Interchange Format. The files in the gif format have the .gif extension.
With some application to edit/create GIF animations, like Microsoft GIF Animator
These file extensions are not video files because they are in fact not a video. The files saved to .gif are animations. Most are of lower quality and are not much longer then a few seconds.
Word is not designed to change graphics. You will need a GIF editor to change the actually graphic itself. You can paste it into a Word Document or import it. All you can do then is things like change the size of it, but not adjust the actual graphic itself.
Open the File Explorer or Finder application on your computer. Navigate to the folder or location where you want to search for GIF files. In the search box, type *.gif and press Enter. This will show you all the files that have the .gif extension in that folder or location.
There are many programs and applications that provide support for creating GIF files such as Jasc Animation Shop and Photoshop. Using these programs, you can create GIF files from your images.
Windows Movie Maker imports .gif files is the original format size. You will have to stretch the gif out on the time-line to see its total animation.
GIF files have a small file size so they can load quicker and you are not sitting and waiting for minutes for the page to load.
I think GIF can do small video type movements that JPG cannot.