but knowing where your head is it is probably hard to remove it and think clearly.
But it clearly stinks, am I right?
but knowing where your head is it is probably hard to remove it and think clearly.
But it clearly stinks, am I right?
Lossy is the term used to describe a file format that when it saves it discards information during the saving process. JPG and MP3 are 2 examples. I did not make this up. Compressed TIFF files are not lossy, as in there is no discarded information. If you were not so busy trying find ways to be rude and belittle others you could actually learn something, but knowing where your head is it is probably hard to remove it and think clearly.
Any compression algorithm discards data, if it didn't it wouldn't be a compression algorithm. Some compression processes reconstruct the original data with more fidelity than others. Some sacrifice fidelity for size. The point is that with bitmaps for the most part you can tolerate a great deal of reconstruction via interpolation or whatever without it being particularly noticeable.
Tell you what sport, I'll create both a jpg and a tif from some image or another and I'll print them both in identical environments. If you can tell which was the tif and which was the jpg without instrumentation I'll kiss your as$ in the middle of the street and give you a 1/2 hour to draw a crowd. Note that telling which is which does not include guessing, a 50:50 proposition, but by giving specific discernible criteria for your choice.
An example of lossless compression might be:
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
Compressed:
26 x 1