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Subject:RE: More on tiff and gifs for screen captures From:"Brierley, Sean" <Sean -at- Quodata -dot- Com> To:"TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com> Date:Thu, 18 Jan 2001 10:46:11 -0500
Hallo:
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Walter Crockett [SMTP:walter -dot- crockett -at- informix -dot- com]
> Sent: Thursday, January 18, 2001 10:22 AM
> To: TECHWR-L
> Subject: More on tiff and gifs for screen captures
>
> There have been so many opinions on this issue that I'm getting a tad
> confused. Here are my questions about screen captures:
>
> * When doing screen captures that will be used in Frame for print
> documents
> and also in online help, is it best to save them as .tiff and then resave
> as
> .gif, using the former for print and the latter for web viewing.
>
I save them as BMP and when I create my online help WebWorks Publisher
converts (prints via PostScript) the BMPs to GIF (or, I could choose PNG or
even JPEG). However, there is really no reason I cannot capture in GIF or
PNG and leave the whole thing alone when going to online help, except that I
miodify the size and placement of the images for use in the online help.
TIFF has an advantage over BMP in that TIFF is supported on non-Windows
platforms and TIFF supports CMYK colors, not just RGB that BMPs support.
However, with regards to screen captures, how many of us are using a
four-color process or care about color accuracy?
> * Does the dpi you specify in the capture tool make any difference at all
> to
> your print or web output? (That is, if I set Snag-It to 300 dpi, why would
> it matter since the screen is only 72 dpi?)
>
Sure, by resampling, SnagIT creates a physically smaller image (shrinking
the image size to 50%, for example, quadruples the resolution). Most
screens, even Macs, are 96dpi-ish, BTW. Still, 96dpi is low enough to
produce jaggies on a 600dpi laser printer . . .. I resample my images to
120dpi, which divides evenly into my printer resolution.
Cheers,
Sean
sean -at- quodata -dot- com
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