Many pixels make up one image. A pixel is like one tiny piece of an image.
A land area of 30 by 30 meters
one byte
a scalar
Most modern digital cameras use 24 bits (8 bits per primary) to represent a color. But more or less can be used, depending on the quality desired. Many early computer graphics cards used only 4 bits to represent a color.
Vector and Raster or pixel images.
To work with digital images and to create brand new pixel based images. You can create Web content or print creations.
A bit depth is a number of bits used to represent the colour of a single pixel.
No. Raster images define images with pixels. But Vector images paint the pixels on your screen!
Yes, bitmap means pixel based.
In order to compare images pixel by pixel, both images must be uncompressed bitmaps of the same size, dimensions and colour depth. If you're looking for an exact match, then you simply compare the pixels in tandem (you can treat both images as being an array of int to speed up the process).
False
There are two types of images you can work with, vector images and pixel(raster or bitmap images).Vector based software are Adobe Illustrator, CorelDraw and you can work both image types, but you have more capabilities to work with vector images, primer for pixel based software is Photoshop in which you can also work with both image types but you have more capabilities to work with pixel images.
Graphic images where each pixel is bit-mapped and take up more memory?
Image processing involves various operations on images. An image is a collection of pixels. Each pixel has its position and resolution.