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SUMMARY
When you try to import a bitmap graphic, you may get an out-of-memory
message, even if the file size of the bitmap is relatively small. When
Publisher, Word, or PowerPoint imports a bitmap graphic, the graphic
is uncompressed in memory before it is imported. Therefore, there must
be an amount of RAM available equal to or greater than the size of the
uncompressed bitmap graphic.
MORE INFORMATIONEvery bitmap-type graphic (TIFF, PCX, BMP, GIF, and so on) is simply a rectangular array of numbers with the numerical value indicating the color of each pixel. To save space on disk, many bitmap-creation programs perform compression on the data. Each particular graphic format provides different options for compressing data. When a Microsoft program imports a file, the graphic is uncompressed in memory before it is imported. If there is not enough RAM available to hold the uncompressed graphic, the import operation fails and returns an out-of-memory message. How to Determine the Uncompressed Size of a Bitmap
Special CaseMicrosoft PowerPoint 97 for Windows and Microsoft Word 97 can import graphics in the Joint Photographic Expert Group (JPEG) and Portable Network Graphics (PNG) formats without decompressing them first. You can therefore import graphics that contain more data into these two programs if you use these formats.Additional query words: 1.00 1.10 1.10a 2.00 2.00a 2.00a-cd 2.00b 2.00c 6.00 6.00a 6.00c winword 3.00 4.00 hang slow raster disk space free memory crash load picture clipart insert large bitmap tiff gif bmp pcx out of not enough insufficient low compressed word6 compress
Keywords : kbgraphic |
Last Reviewed: July 22, 1999 © 2000 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. Terms of Use. |