animated GIF - significado y definición. Qué es animated GIF
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Qué (quién) es animated GIF - definición

BITMAP IMAGE FILE FORMAT FAMILY
Gif; .gif; Animated GIF; Animated gif; .GIF; GIF animation; GIF animator; GIFSCII; Interlaced GIF; Animated GIFs; Transparent gif; Transparent GIF; Gif animation; Blinky (image); GIF89a; GIF87a; GIF.; Anigif; .gfa; Graphic interchange format; Graphics interchange format; Graphic Interchange Format; GIF89; GiF; 4,558,302; Progressive GIF; Jraphics; Libungif; Libgif; Giflib; Graphics Interchange Format; Video alternative to GIF; .gifv; Gifv; Video alternative to the Graphics Interchange Format; Video alternative to the GIF; GIFV; GIFs; Scaled GIF; Image/gif
  • A GIF animation made of two photos, one [[morphing]] into the other
  • Bytes D<sub>h</sub> to 30C<sub>h</sub> in the example define a palette of 256 colors.
  • GIF can be used to display animation, as in this image of [[Newton's cradle]].
  • center
  • An animated GIF illustrating a technique for displaying more than the typical limit of 256 colors
  • Floyd–Steinberg]] method. Due to the reduced number of colors in the image, there are display issues.
  • White House]] suggests pronouncing ''GIF'' with a hard ''g''.

Animated GIF         
<graphics, file format> (GIF89a) A variant of the GIF image format, often used on World-Wide Web pages to provide moving icons and banners. The GIF89a format supports multiple "frames" that give the impression of motion when displayed in sequence, much like a flip book. The animation may repeat continuously or play once. Animated GIFs aren't supported by earlier web browsers, however the first frame of the image is still shown. There are many utilities to create animated GIFs from a sequence of individual GIF files. There are also utilities that will produce animated GIFs automatically from a piece of text or a single image. One problem with this format is the size of the files produced, as they are by definition a sequence of individual images. Apart from minimising the number of frames, the best way to decrease file size is to assist the LZW compression by using blocks of solid colour, avoid dithering, and use fewer colours. If areas of an image don't change from one frame to another, they don't need to be redrawn so make the area a transparent block in the second frame. (1999-08-01)
Gif         
·conj If.
Graphics Interchange Format         
<graphics, file format> /gif/, occasionally /jif/ (GIF, GIF 89A) A standard for digitised images compressed with the LZW algorithm, defined in 1987 by CompuServe (CIS). Graphics Interchange Format and GIF are service marks of CompuServe Incorporated. This only affects use of GIF within Compuserve, and pass-through licensing for software to access them, it doesn't affect anyone else's use of GIF. It followed from a 1994 legal action by Unisys against CIS for violating Unisys's LZW software patent. The CompuServe Vice President has stated that "CompuServe is committed to keeping the GIF 89A specification as an open, fully-supported, non-proprietary specification for the entire on-line community including the World-Wide Web". Filename extension: .gif. File format (ftp://peipa.essex.ac.uk/ipa/info/file-formats). {GIF89a specification (http://asterix.seas.upenn.edu/Graphics Interchange Formatmayer/lzw_gif/gif89a.html)}. See also progressive coding, animated GIF. (2000-09-12)

Wikipedia

GIF

The Graphics Interchange Format (GIF; GHIF or JIF, see pronunciation) is a bitmap image format that was developed by a team at the online services provider CompuServe led by American computer scientist Steve Wilhite and released on June 15, 1987. It is in widespread usage on the World Wide Web due to its wide support and portability between applications and operating systems.

The format supports up to 8 bits per pixel for each image, allowing a single image to reference its own palette of up to 256 different colors chosen from the 24-bit RGB color space. It also supports animations and allows a separate palette of up to 256 colors for each frame. These palette limitations make GIF less suitable for reproducing color photographs and other images with color gradients but well-suited for simpler images such as graphics or logos with solid areas of color.

GIF images are compressed using the Lempel–Ziv–Welch (LZW) lossless data compression technique to reduce the file size without degrading the visual quality.