HP 4400C HP Scanjet 4400C/5400C Series Scanner Windows - (English) User Manual - Page 123

Hewlett-Packard, Kodak, Live Picture, and Microsoft.

Page 123 highlights

122 Glossary To move an object on screen. Place the cursor over the image or selection area, hold the left mouse button down, and move the mouse to move the object. To move an object to a new location and keep it there. Click on the object and drag it to a new location, such as an open document in another program, and release the mouse button. When dragging-anddropping between programs, a copy of the object is placed in the receiving program. A list of items that appears when you click on or pass the cursor over a command such as File or Edit. e Text that is converted from a scanned image into characters you can modify in a word processor or other text-editing program. Depending on the capabilities of your program, you can change the font, size, style, and other attributes of editable text, as well as edit words or phrases. A network over which you can transfer messages and electronic files. E-mail is also sent via Internet browsers. To save a file in a particular file format for use in other programs. Back to TOC The amount of light, or brightness and contrast, in an image. f The format in which a scan is saved. Certain file formats enable programs such as word processors to insert, open, or import scans. Common graphics formats include .bmp, .jpg, and .tif. Common text formats include .txt (text) and .rtf (Rich Text Format). The number of bytes in a file. The file size of scanned images is determined by resolution, file type, output type, and scaling. To reduce the file size of photographs, for example, you could decrease bit depth or resolution. The actual image, defined by the selection area, that is sent to a destination such as a file, a printer, the Clipboard, or another program. The approximate height and width of the final image to be scanned. A format that allows faster processing, but creates larger file sizes. FlashPix files, which save with the .fpx extension, can be used on Windows and Macintosh platforms. The format was developed by Hewlett-Packard, Kodak, Live Picture, and Microsoft.

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122
Glossary
Back to TOC
To move an object on screen. Place the cursor over the image or
selection area, hold the left mouse button down, and move the mouse
to move the object.
To move an object to a new location and keep it there. Click on the
object and drag it to a new location, such as an open document in
another program, and release the mouse button. When dragging-and-
dropping between programs, a copy of the object is placed in the
receiving program.
A list of items that appears when you click on or pass the cursor over a
command such as
File
or
Edit
.
e
Text that is converted from a scanned image into characters you can
modify in a word processor or other text-editing program. Depending
on the capabilities of your program, you can change the font, size,
style, and other attributes of editable text, as well as edit words or
phrases.
A network over which you can transfer messages and electronic files.
E-mail is also sent via Internet browsers.
To save a file in a particular file format for use in other programs.
The amount of light, or brightness and contrast, in an image.
f
The format in which a scan is saved. Certain file formats enable
programs such as word processors to insert, open, or import scans.
Common graphics formats include .bmp, .jpg, and .tif. Common text
formats include .txt (text) and .rtf (Rich Text Format).
The number of bytes in a file. The file size of scanned images is
determined by resolution, file type, output type, and scaling. To reduce
the file size of photographs, for example, you could decrease bit depth
or resolution.
The actual image, defined by the selection area, that is sent to a
destination such as a file, a printer, the Clipboard, or another program.
The approximate height and width of the final image to be scanned.
A format that allows faster processing, but creates larger file sizes.
FlashPix files, which save with the .fpx extension, can be used on
Windows and Macintosh platforms. The format was developed by
Hewlett-Packard, Kodak, Live Picture, and Microsoft.