What is the difference between .mvg and .fpx?
- Extension
- .mvg
- .fpx
- Category
- Vector Image
- Raster Image
- Developer
- ImageMagick
- Kodak
- Description
- A Magick Vector Graphics (MVG) file is a specialized image file format used by ImageMagick, a free and open-source software suite for displaying, converting, and editing raster and vector image files. The MVG format is designed to store vector graphics instructions in a plain text format, which describe how to create or modify images using a series of drawing commands. These commands can include instructions for drawing shapes, setting colors, applying transformations, and other graphical operations.
- The FPX (FlashPix Bitmap Image File) format is a type of image file designed to support high-resolution photographs and images. Developed in the mid-1990s by a consortium including Kodak, Microsoft, Hewlett-Packard, and Live Picture Inc., the FPX format is based on the Image Content Architecture (ICA), which allows it to store multiple resolutions of an image within a single file. This makes it especially useful for efficiently viewing and editing images without requiring the full image file.
- MIME Type
- image/x-magick vector graphics
- image/vnd.fpx
- Sample
- sample.mvg
- sample.fpx
- Wikipedia
- .mvg on Wikipedia
- .fpx on Wikipedia