Off the top of my head.... PSD, PNG, EPS, WMF, and more I'm sure.
png 24, and more
Transparency is a GIF option that removes the background color of a graphic . This effect adds a transparent background for images saved as GIF (Graphics Interchange Format) files.
A flattened image has only one layer. After the image is flattened, it has the same appearance it had before. The difference is that all of the image contents are in a single layer without transparency. If there are any areas which are transparent through all of the layers of the original image, the background color is visible. By flattening an image we introduce significant changes to the structure of the image. It is normally only necessary when you would like to save an image in a format which does not support levels or transparency (an alpha channel).
This would be png files as Jpeg files do not support transparency and Gif files do support animations. Png files are one of the major files which support transparency and do not support animations.
transparent tapemost types of glassclear glassairwaterclear tapeplastic bottlewindowcontainerjarclear tablescreen
There is no hex color code for that. It is generally handled by a separate setting, for example, in openGL, there is an additional variable along with the hex called the alpha value which controls transparency.
Depends on the characteristics of the werewolf. Alpha's dont have a specific pelt color
Transparency
RGBA stands for Red Green Blue Alpha color model. Alpha is a value depicting the opacity of the color: from 0 - completely transparent, to 255 - fully visible.Sometimes this is referred as ARGB (like RGBA, but first datum is alpha), which is used, for example, in Macromedia products. For example, 0x80FFFF00 is 50%-transparent yellow, because all parameters are expressed on a 0-to-255 scale. 0x80 is 128, approximately half 255 (alpha 50%); 0xFF is 255, the greatest value a parameter can have (pure red); the second 0xFF is like the previous, but for green; and 0x00 is 0 in decimal (no blue). Red, green, and half transparency mixture are 50% transparent yellow.PNG file format uses RGBA to store it's data.
Alpha Piscium is white.
No. JPEG does not support transparency and is not likely to do so any time soon. It turns out that adding transparency to JPEG would not be a simple task; read on if you want the gory details. The traditional approach to transparency, as found in GIF and some other file formats, is to choose one otherwise-unused color value to denote a transparent pixel. That can't work in JPEG because JPEG is lossy: a pixel won't necessarily come out *exactly* the same color that it started as. Normally, a small error in a pixel value is OK because it affects the image only slightly. But if it changes the pixel from transparent to normal or vice versa, the error would be highly visible and annoying, especially if the actual background were quite different from the transparent color. A more reasonable approach is to store an alpha channel (transparency percentage) as a separate color component in a JPEG image. That could work since a small error in alpha makes only a small difference in the result. The problem is that a typical alpha channel is exactly the sort of image that JPEG does very badly on: lots of large flat areas and sudden jumps. You'd have to use a very high quality setting for the alpha channel. It could be done, but the penalty in file size is large. A transparent JPEG done this way could easily be double the size of a non-transparent JPEG. That's too high a price to pay for most uses of transparency. The only real solution is to combine lossy JPEG storage of the image with lossless storage of a transparency mask using some other algorithm. Developing, standardizing, and popularizing a file format capable of doing that is not a small task. As far as I know, no serious work is being done on it; transparency doesn't seem worth that much effort.
blue-white color.
RGB-24 uses 1 byte for Red, Green and Blue respectively.256x256x256 or 2^24 different colorsRGB-32 uses 1 byte for Red, Green, Blue and Transparency/Alpha respectively. The number of possible colors is the same as RGB-24 since transparency does only specify how to over-impose the image and does not define a color property by itself.