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Mastering CorelDRAW 9

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The JPEG Format

The JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) format is ideal for displaying photographs or full-color graphics because it supports palettes of up to 16 million colors (and even beyond, although there is no point in using deeper palettes for Web graphics). JPEG is also very aggressive in its compression. Unlike with the GIF format, though, this compression comes at a price: JPEG files lose their fidelity as they are compressed. You do have control over how much compression you use, and therefore how much fidelity loss you introduce.

The other compromise you must deal with is the absence of the transparency control you have with the GIF format. This is rarely an issue with photographs, as they are usually rectangular, but there will be times when you will wish for a transparency feature for JPEG images.

Figure 20.9 is the starting point for our exploration into JPEG file creation. It is the same rectangle used before, but it is filled with a bitmap pattern fill instead of a fountain fill.


FIGURE 20.9  These stones have more shades and colors than can be faithfully reproduced with 256 colors. That makes it a good candidate for the JPEG format.

Here’s what you need to do to prepare for our next laboratory test:

1.  Switch to your text editor and open the HTML file you created for working with GIF files (we called ours My Web Page.htm).
2.  Make the following change.

Save and close the file—now you’re ready to begin. Switch to DRAW and replace the fountain fill in your rectangle with a bitmap pattern fill (you can use the stones as we did, or pick another one).

1.  Export the rectangle, this time choosing the JPEG Bitmaps format. Call the graphic rectangle.jpg (the name you have already designated in the HTML file) and make sure that it is being written to the same directory.
2.  Choose RGB Color for the palette, set the Size to 1 to 1, and the Resolution to 96dpi.
3.  OK this dialog, and you will be taken to a subdialog.

The two key elements here are Compression and Smoothing. As you move those sliders to the right, they each affect the display of the image and the resultant file size. You can click Preview to see a dynamic representation of each adjustment, as well as an approximation of file size.

4.  Set both sliders to 0 and OK this dialog to write the image.
5.  Switch to your browser and refresh the page. It should look like Figure 20.10.

If the picture of the rocks does not display, it means that the name you designated in the HTML file is not the same as the one you just used when you exported the image from DRAW, or you did not export rectangle.jpg into the same location.


FIGURE 20.10  When exported at the lowest compression level, these rocks look as good as they do in DRAW.

The stones display at the highest possible fidelity, and they also consume over 130KB of disk space. As you have probably already guessed, when you move those controls to the right, the image size shrinks and the quality of the image is reduced. Small increases in compression are not likely to be noticeable, and every image will have its own threshold—the point beyond which increases in compression do result in image degradation. The responsibility is yours to find that threshold, and you can practice the routine with these stones: export the image with different compression and smoothing values, and then switch to your browser to see the difference.

Two other controls are found on the compression and smoothing dialog. The JPEG format has its own version of the interlace control, and it’s called Progressive. It is much more subtle than the Interlaced effect on GIF images, and in fact, we don’t use it very often. The Optimize check box instructs DRAW to use the most efficient encoding method possible. This check box is a bit ahead of its time; in fact, we suspect that 95 percent of the time that you arrive at this dialog, you will address Compression and Smoothing and ignore all else.


NOTE As with all types of publishing and “printing,” nothing takes the place of trial, error, and observation. In that spirit, we have created a comprehensive Web page whose sole purpose is to demonstrate the various controls and settings discussed here. It is located on our lead author’s Web site at www.altman.com/webgraphics. This page uses four independent frames so you can make side-by-side comparisons of images with different color depths and settings. It is ideal for developing a feel for the controls and how they affect image quality. You can either work this page from altman.com, or download all of the files and open them from your own hard drive for better performance. If you do, make sure to place them all in the same directory.

Animated GIF Files

We approach this topic with fear and trepidation. Please raise your right hand and repeat after us:

I will not abuse the power of Animated GIF files. I will not use them inappropriately, and I will resist all urges to use them on every page that I create.

Okay, with that out of the way, we can now explain to you that the GIF format is capable of containing multiple images in a file, each in its own frame. When the file is read from a Web page, each of the images is displayed in rapid succession. This gives the appearance of animation, much the way that Saturday morning cartoons are displayed on television. The alternative is to resort to complex script programming using Java or CGI—a fate on par with watching a dishwasher operate from the inside.

DRAW does not know how to create animated GIFs, but PHOTO-PAINT does. Using its movie feature, PAINT stitches multiple images together into an animation. PAINT’s movies can be saved as AVI files or animated GIF files, and the current versions of Internet Explorer and Navigator support animated GIFs.

Creating an Animation

The steps for creating an animated GIF file are beyond the scope of this chapter, but to the rescue comes the companion page on the Sybex Web site. From there, open flight.htm to see a simple animation in action. From that page, you can also take a tour of how it was built, complete with step-by-step instructions and illustrations.

And once again, please keep in mind the potential distraction that animated GIF files can cause if they are used frivolously (not to mention the fact that they take longer to load than conventional graphics). If you expect your visitors to spend several minutes on the same page, nothing could be worse than making them watch something constantly blink, or flash, or scroll. If, on the other hand, you want to highlight a special offer on a page designed to be a launching point (meaning that viewers won’t spend much time there), then creating a button that changes from one color to another might be an effective way to do it. But make sure to not set it for an endless loop—one or two cycles will be just fine.

Remember our admonition from Chapter 18: if you make everything bold, you have made nothing bold. If you animate in the wrong places or for the wrong reasons, you doom your original purpose.


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