the Bit depth
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this cannot be answered without pixel density information
Each image has a certain number of pixels depending on the size (ex: 5mp camera takes shots that contain 5,000,000 pixels of color). The conversion begins from left to right, top to bottom, similar to reading words on a page. The first pixel is first converted into it's color code (a six digit code that all colors on a chart are organized by), and then that six digit code is converted into a binary string. So if the first pixel is medium gray, the color code is 646464, that code is then converted to binary using the binary numbering system. So 6=110 and 4=100, so the first medium gray pixel is 110100110100110100, then the next pixel is translated in the same manner and the string is continued. So if you had a 5mp medium gray image, the binary string would contain 80 million digits of 1s and 0s. Different color images would create larger strings
A bitmap is a series of bits which represents a rasterized graphic image, each pixel being represented as a group of bits.
The answer depends on the size of the pixel!
False. A dot on the screen that contains a color is called a "pixel."
Pixel depth refers to the number of bits used to represent the color of each pixel in a digital image. It determines the range of colors that can be displayed in an image. A higher pixel depth allows for more colors and greater color accuracy, while a lower pixel depth may result in color banding or a limited color palette.
Pixel
A pixel (from PICture ELement)
In any computer application, a dot on the screen is called a pixel.
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pixel
A colored dot that is the smallest part of a bitmap image is called a pixel. Each pixel is a tiny square or dot that contains a single color value and together they form the complete image. The resolution of a bitmap image is determined by the number of pixels it contains.
Pixels
little aliens
pixel
bit depth