What is the difference between .rppm and .tiff?
- Extension
- .rppm
- .tiff
- Format
- Binary
- Binary
- Category
- Raster Image
- Raster Image
- Developer
- Netpbm
- Adobe Systems
- Description
- The RPPM file format, standing for "Portable Pixmap," is a type of image file designed to store pixmap images in a portable, ASCII text format. It represents color images using a simple, human-readable text format that specifies pixel values with three components: red, green, and blue, allowing for straightforward sharing and manipulation across different systems and software. RPPM files are part of the Netpbm project, which includes various formats for portable grayscale (PGM) and bitmap (PBM) images as well. Due to their simplicity and ASCII base, RPPM files can be larger and less efficient in terms of storage compared to binary image formats, but they offer exceptional compatibility and ease of use for programming and image processing tasks.
- A TIFF file is a graphics container that stores raster images. It may contain high-quality graphics that support color depths from 1 to 24-bit and supports both lossy and lossless compression. TIFF files also support multiple layers and pages.
- MIME Type
- image/x-portable-pixmap
- image/tiff
- Sample
- sample.tiff
- Wikipedia
- .rppm on Wikipedia
- .tiff on Wikipedia