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Are all .clp files Microsoft Windows Clipboard? A drawing program that I am trying out will import and export .clp files (or export .pcx files) and there seems to be nothing else that it will import. I tried importing a .clp file that I made out of a gif file (with Newdeal) and it displayed as a blank page, and a .clp file from the drawing program would not import at all into Newdeal (format not supported). Could the author be using .clp for some other nonstandard format?
6 responses total.
The author tells me that his .clp files are in a formatted that he invented in 1990, before Windows started using the same file extension. They are vector based, which prints better.
How many different graphic file formats are there in common use, and which ones are vector based?
Obviously, the most common ones are .bmp (microbloat :-), .jpg, and .gif There are others such as .tif and .pcx, but you don't see them in a frequent use. Web browsers know how to display .jpg and .gif directly.
Can browsers also display pcx, which I am told are bitmapped but for some reason when I did a screen capture the pcx file was a third the length of a gif file.
Re #3: There's also PNG, which is similar to GIF but has better compression and doesn't have the patent rights problems GIF does. Most recent browsers now support it, but not all fully support transparent PNG files yet. It's a little misleading to think of TIF as a single graphic format. I can think of at least five different types of TIF file that are mutually incompatible.
Dunno re: browsers & .pcx, but it would be reasonable to assume "no".
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