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Compressing and downsampling images When converting PostScript files to Adobe PDF, you can compress text and line art (which is also called vector objects), and compress and downsample color, grayscale, and monochrome images. Line art is described with a mathematical equation and is usually created with a drawing program such as Adobe Illustrator. Images are described as pixels and are created with paint programs or from scanners. Monochrome images include most black-and-white illustrations made by paint programs and any images scanned with an image depth of 1 bit. Adobe Photoshop, for example, works with images. When you downsample (or decrease the number of pixels), information is deleted from the image. With Distiller, you specify an interpolation method--average downsampling, bicubic downsampling, or subsampling--to determine how pixels are deleted. Depending on the settings you choose, compression and downsampling can significantly reduce the size of a PDF file with little or no loss of detail and precision. Related Subtopics: Methods of compression Applying different settings to different images
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