-Figure \ref{vector-vs-raster} shows a vector image (left) which has been rasterised (right). At the original scale the two foxes should appear to be mirror images\footnote{If I've worked out the scaling to account for dpi differences between inkscape and latex/pdf correctly}. When the scale is increased, the edges of the vector image remain sharp, whilst the raster image begins to appear jagged. PDF viewers will typically use antialiasing to smooth the edges of a scaled bitmap, causing the image to appear blurred.\footnote{In the Atril Document Viewer 1.6.0 this image will only be antialiased at zoom levels $\leq 125\%$}.
-
-Various ways to end this section:
-\begin{enumerate}
- \item \rephrase{It should be obvious that documents containing text must use the vector graphics format, and so the remainder of this chapter will concentrate on the latter}.
- \item \rephrase{As can be seen in Figure \ref{fox}, if we were to decide to pursue ``infinite precision'' in raster graphics we would be shooting ourselves in both feet and then the face before we even started. The rest of this chapter will concentrate on vector graphics.}
- \item \rephrase{You can't have infinite precision in raster graphics by definition, therefore we no longer care about them in this report.}
- \item \rephrase{This report being in a vector format is a clue that we only care about vector formats}.
-\end{enumerate}
-
-\section{Primitives in Vector Graphics Formats (and how they are Rendered)}
-
-\subsection{Bezier Curves}
-\rephrase{I did an ipython notebook on this in February, but I forgot all of it}
-
-\subsection{Text}
-Text is just Bezier Curves
-
-\subsection{Shapes}
-Shapes are just bezier curves joined together.
-
-\subsection{Other Things}
-We don't really care about other things (ie: Colour gradients etc) in this report.