.gif files are easily animated into - you guessed it - animated gifs using any of a number of freeware/shareware found on the internet (search for "animate gif".
.bmp can be animated into .avi files (but with more difficulty).
Most any image format can be converted to another format with appropriate tools (my favorite is IrfanView - great freeware!)
An anigif is an animated image in .gif format.
MNG, or Multi-image Network Graphics is an extension of the PNG file format. MNG files can be animated, but are often used much less than the widely supported GIF file format.
Full form of GIF format of image is Graphics Interchange Format. This format of image can able to save only 256 colors which makes this format poor in the comparison of other image format.
I don't believe that is possible, because JPEG files are still images. If you were tp convert a GIF image into a JPG image, it will no longer be animated.
To cite an image in APA format, include the artist's name, year the image was created, title of the image, format (e.g., photograph, painting), and the source where the image was found.
To cite an image in APA format, include the artist's name, year the image was created, title of the image, format (e.g., photograph, painting), and the source where the image was found.
i think it not supports any image format...
TIFF stands for Tagged Image File Format :)
Depends on the image format:
An APNG is a computer file format, Animated Portable Network Graphics, used for animated graphics with lossless compression designed to replace the Netscape GIF format.
The JPEG/EXIF file format is optimized for storing photographs like images. It uses lossy compression, RGB, 8 bit per channel, no support for transparency or multiple images, 2D images support. The files are small and as long as the compression is not too great the image quality is almost identical to the original. JPEG images are very common, being supported virtually by every imaging device and image processing software. Due to their small size are ideal for storing, transmitting and embedding photos or similar images.
Exchangeable image file format was created in 1995.