GIMP, just like Photoshop or MS Paint, is a bitmap program. Vector programs are programs that are based around curved and straight lines to create an image that doesn't have any pixels.
Nothing, they are the same.
nothing at all
What is Collinear Vector
A vector is a quantity with both a direction and magnitude
When drawing a vector using the triangle method you will draw in the resultant vector using Pythagorean theorem. This is taught in physics.
Not sure Vector i think
If you are referring to a bitmap image, it can be opened in Microsoft Paint, Adobe Photoshop, and GIMP. Most any image or photo program should be able to open a bitmap image.
Difference between a vector and bitmap graphics is that a vector is a format of a drawing whereas bitmap is a format of a photo. * the advantages of a vector is that the drawing can be stretched to any size without ruining the quality and bitmap is faster to display .Bitmap graphics as being stored in a literal fashion, then Vector Graphics, stored representative are their opposites
One can import both vector and raster/bitmap image formats into InDesign.
Almost every single vector editing piece of software can today, for example MSPaint, Paint.NET, GIMP, Photoshop, Inkscape, Irfanview...
No, bitmap and vector graphics are not the same. Bitmap graphics are made up of pixels and can lose quality if enlarged, while vector graphics are made up of mathematical equations and can be scaled infinitely without losing quality.
You can not enlarge bitmap images without losing quality and bitmap images are larger in size then vector.
Vector and Bitmap.
Adobe Flash uses vector and bitmap to create animations. There are probably others, which I don't know of. I use Adobe Flash and I'm happy with it.
For Vector it's .png .tif/.tiff .gif For Bitmap it's .bmp .jpg/.jpeg .gif
Vector and bitmap are both image files. Bitmapped images are images that are stored on a pixel by pixel basis and because of this, when you enlarge the image it can appear blocky. A vector image is constructed from dots, lines, shapes, etc. Each part has a particular position within the image with it's own dimensions. Because vector images are constructed using images, they can be enlarged without loss of image quality. Vector images do not get the blocky appearance of an enlarged bitmap image.
The image on the sensor isn't any image format, when this analogue data is put through the A/D converter and saved they are saved in a bitmap container (Jpeg and Raw (NEF, CR2, PEF Etc.) are all bitmap formats) all images are either a bitmap or a vector graphic, out of the camera they are bitmap, but the data in the file can be opened as a Vector Graphic in some programs.