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Image:BlankMap Thailand.png – Thailand provinces, 20% rescaling factor suggested. Image:China blank map-1.png – People's Republic of China; Image:China blank map-2.png – People's Republic of China; Image:Hong Kong District Locator (template map).png – Hong Kong Special Administrative Region of the People's Republic of China.
On small images, GIF can achieve greater compression than PNG (see the section on filesize, below). On most images, except for the above case, a GIF file has a larger size than an indexed PNG image. PNG gives a much wider range of transparency options than GIF, including alpha channel transparency.
This image has partial transparency (254 possible levels of transparency between fully transparent and fully opaque). It can be transparent against any background despite being anti-aliased. Some image formats, such as PNG and TIFF, also allow partial transparency through an alpha channel, which solves the edge limitation problem.
The only requirement was that this image was invisible, either by being the same color as the page, or by being transparent. Spacer GIFs themselves were small transparent image files. GIF files were used as it was a common format that supported transparency, unlike JPEG. These files were commonly named spacer.gif, transparent.gif or 1x1.gif.
Media in category "Images that should have transparent backgrounds" The following 105 files are in this category, out of 105 total. 111th Battle For The Bell.jpeg 370 × 208; 33 KB
Metadata – An image may have metadata stored in EXIF or XMP formats. Transparency – An image may have transparency, i.e., an alpha channel. Color Profile – An image may have an embedded ICC profile as described by the International Color Consortium. Animation – An image may have multiple frames with pauses between them, making it an ...
Spy pixels or tracker pixels are hyperlinks to remote image files in HTML email messages that have the effect of spying on the person reading the email if the image is downloaded. [1] [2] They are commonly embedded in the HTML of an email as small, imperceptible, transparent graphic files. [3]
X PixMap (XPM) is an image file format used by the X Window System, created in 1989 by Daniel Dardailler and Colas Nahaboo working at Bull Research Center at Sophia Antipolis, France, and later enhanced by Arnaud Le Hors. [2] [3] It is intended primarily for creating icon pixmaps, and supports transparent pixels.