Adobe ADBCD17648MC 사용자 설명서

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USING PHOTOSHOP ELEMENTS 8
Optimizing for the web
Last updated 7/26/2011
PNG-24 
Like JPEG, this is a good format for photographs. Choose PNG-24 rather than JPEG only when your image 
contains transparency. (JPEG does not support transparency; you must fill it with a matte color.) PNG-24 files are 
often much larger than JPEG files of the same image. 
GIF 
GIF is the format to use for line art, illustrations with large areas of solid color and crisp detail, and text. Also, if 
you want to export an animated image, you must use GIF.
PNG-8 
PNG-8 is a lesser-known alternative to GIF. Use it for the same purposes (except animation).
Images in GIF and PNG-8 formats, sometimes called indexed-color images, can display up to 256 colors. To convert 
an image to indexed-color format, Photoshop Elements builds a color lookup table. If a color in the original image does 
not appear in the color lookup table, the application either chooses the closest color in the table or simulates the color 
using a combination of available colors. 
JPEG and PNG-24 files support 24-bit color, so they can display up to 16 million colors. Depending on the format, you 
can specify image quality, background transparency or matting, color display, and the method a browser should use 
to display the image while downloading. 
The appearance of an image on the web also depends on the colors displayed by the computer platform, operating 
system, monitor, and browser. You may want to preview images in different browsers and on different platforms to 
see how they will appear on the web.
About the JPEG format
The JPEG format supports 24-bit color, so it preserves the subtle variations in brightness and hue found in 
photographs. A progressive JPEG file displays a low-resolution version of the image in the web browser while the full 
image is downloading. 
JPEG image compression is called lossy because it selectively discards image data. A higher quality setting results in 
less data being discarded, but the JPEG compression method may still degrade sharp detail in an image, particularly 
in images containing type or vector art.
Note: Artifacts, such as wavelike patterns or blocky areas of banding, are created each time you save an image in JPEG 
format. Therefore, you should always save JPEG files from the original image, not from a previously saved JPEG.
Original image (left), and optimized JPEG with Low quality setting (right)
The JPEG format does not support transparency. When you save an image as a JPEG file, transparent pixels are filled 
with the matte color specified in the Save For Web dialog box. To simulate the effect of background transparency, you 
can match the matte color to the web page background color. If your image contains transparency and you do not 
know the web page background color, or if the background is a pattern, you should use a format that supports 
transparency (GIF, PNG-8, or PNG-24).
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