You must have PAINT Program on your system. Right? Well then you can easily create Bitmap images there. Simply Save Type should be as Bitmap (.bmp) while saving the picture you created on paint.
You can make a bitmap in paint. When you save your image just choose .bmp as the file extension.
One can import both vector and raster/bitmap image formats into InDesign.
To map a bitmap image to another bitmap image in Photoshop, first, open both images in the program. Select the source image, then use the "Select" tool to choose the area you want to map. Copy the selection (Ctrl+C or Command+C), then switch to the destination image and paste it (Ctrl+V or Command+V). Use the "Transform" tool (Ctrl+T or Command+T) to adjust the size and position of the pasted bitmap to fit your desired location.
Microsoft paint also Adobe fireworks
1024bitsIf "Bitmap" refers to a specific entity, image or file: I do not know. But if "Bitmap" refers to a general image then it is 8 bytes or 64 bits per pixel. I just made 3 1*1 bitmap images at colordepths 2bits (monochrome), 8 bits (256 colors) and 24 bits (16 Million colors). The sizes of these images were the same! (surprized me too!) Then I made a 1*2 pixel image and it was 66 bytes (528 bits) so the "overhead Microsoft paint puts on a bitmap is 400 bits. This could be an effect of limitations inherent in Microsoft Paint.
This is a tricky area. It is legal to use images of currency in a graphic design, however, and this is the tricky part, the image cannot be the same size as the currency, and cannot show the entire bill. Currently, bills have protective devices that prevent photocopying. In order to be safe, alter, alter, alter the image.
Use the Print Screen key. This copies the entire desktop to the clipboard (CTRL + Print Screen copies just the active window). From there you can paste the image into any image editor (such as Microsoft Paint) and save the image as a bitmap. Finally, drag and drop the saved bitmap into Microsoft Word.
The size of a JPEG file depends on the compression algorithm and on the content of the source image. There is no direct answer to you question. What you can do to find it out is to capture the screen, then use mspaint to save the file as a bitmap and after that convert the bitmap to a jpeg using an image converter that allows you to play with the jpeg parameters - for example AZImage. See also related questions and links.
It stores the image as a digital data file. By default, it is a BMP (bitmap file), but it can be translated into many other file types by Paint.
Learn how to use image software or ask some one who does know how to use image software to add your picture into a picture of Jackie Chan.
bitmap is a raster image which is anything with lots of detail while a vector is an image that is made up of geometric shapes and therefore can be manipulated in ways in which is keeps its detail. raster images vary depending on resolution and can only be made bigger if they have a higher resolution while vectors can scale without regards to resolution as they are made of geometric primitives. Simple things use vector while more complete images are usually raster/bitmap.
bob