The fixed amount of space between lines of text, generally measured in points.
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The part of lowercase letters extending above the body or "x-height".
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An Adobe program used to create and use pdf (portable document format) files that enable the file to be viewed on almost any computer operating system.
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A jagged look of an image or type that happens when the resolution is inadequate or when images have been increased. The square pixels that make up the image are then visable to the naked eye.
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Placing images or type to line up with an invisible grid or in relation to one another. This can be done vertically or horizontally. Text can be aligned to the left, right, center or justified
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A feature of the GIF89a (Graphics Interchange Format) file format containing two or more images that simulates motion/animation when viewed in a browser. The motion/animation can repeat continuously or play only once.
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Blending the color/pixels at the edge of an image or type with the background to smooth out the jagged edges.
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In Graphic Design, a line on a graph or grid used to show the position of a point. The plural of axis is axes.
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Pictures or words that move on the screen.
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ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange) -- This is the de facto world-wide standard for the code numbers used by computers to represent all the upper and lower-case Latin letters, numbers, punctuation, etc. There are 128 standard ASCII codes each of which can be represented by a 7 digit binary number: 0000000 through 1111111.
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Macromedia's software, the leading tool for web-based multimedia and learning, a special plugin (Shockwave) is required to view such sites.
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Microsoft®'s database software, available in some versions of Microsoft® Office
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("Active Server Pages") server-side scripting technology developed by Microsoft®
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