-%\footnote{\noindent This behaviour may be configured in some PDF viewers (Adobe Reader) whilst others (Evince, Atril, Okular) will choose whether or not to bother with antialiasing based on the zoom level. For best results experiment with changing the zoom level in your PDF viewer.\footnotemark}\footnotetext{On the author's hardware, the animals in the vector and raster images should appear mirrored pixel for pixel; but they may vary slightly on other PDF viewers or display devices.}
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-In contrast, the left sides of Figures \ref{vector-vs-raster} and \ref{vector-vs-raster-scaled} are a vector image. A vector image contains information about a number of geometric shapes. To display this image on modern display hardware, the coordinates are transformed according to the view and \emph{then} the image is converted into a raster like representation. Whilst the raster image merely appears to contain edges, the vector image actually contains information about these edges, meaning they can be displayed ``infinitely sharply'' at any level of detail\cite{citationneeded} --- or they could be if the coordinates are stored with enough precision (see Section \ref{}). Thus, vector images are well suited to high quality digital art\footnote{Figure \ref{vector-vs-raster} is not to be taken as an example of this.} and text.
+The left sides of Figures \ref{vector-vs-raster} and \ref{vector-vs-raster-scaled} are a vector image. When scaled, the edges maintain a smooth appearance which is limited by the resolution of the display rather than the image itself. Vector images are well suited to high quality digital art\footnote{Figure \ref{vector-vs-raster} is not to be taken as an example of this.} and text.