Depth affects the quality of a picture in a few ways. Depth can make a picture look bland or it can make it look meaningful or artistic. It can be blurry or completely in focus.
it is a bango that jumps in the air
Changing the image resolution will affect the file size of the image and the quality of the image. Image resolution is measure in DPI, which is Dots Per Inch, this means that if you increase the resolution then the DPI will increase and the quality of the image will get better as a result as there are more pixels that make up the image, so the image will be more distinct and sharper. When the image resolution is increased the image has more pixels, this is the exact opposite to the compression techniques, this means that the file will get a lot bigger as the number of pixels increases. Decreasing the resolution, however, will make the image quality lower but will reduce the file size.
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By reducing the size if a image
help center in on an image
image magnification,image distortion,image un sharpness
No, just changes the distance required between the lens and the screen in order to get a good picture. BUT it does not affect image quality.
A JPEG image loses quality when it is opened and resaved due the compression algorithms. The more an image is opened and resaved, the more the quality can degrade. An image on a disc will not lose quality unless you resave it on a CD-RW. Opening an image to print will not affect the quality.
A CRT Monitor can support many output resolutions without losing quality of the image. But LCDs only support lower resolutions by interpolating the image, which makes it look "fuzzy".
It affects the aesthetic value of the image. Composition is very, very, very important.
The size depends on the following factors: Image format. Eg. .PNG, .BMP, .JPG, .GIF, ETC. Image Colour quality: 64-bit, 32-bit, 16-bit, monochrome, etc
32
I think you mean a 3 demintional image. Which would be an image with length, width, and depth.