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Anti-aliasing
Anti-aliasing smoothes out the "jaggies" in vector objects and text when they are converted to images. It has no effect when converting "paint" images like scanned photos. To use anti-aliasing, click the appropriate box. Anti-aliasing takes longer and requires more memory, but the images look better. Anti-aliased text loses some of its contrast, however.

File format
You have two choices of file formats: GIF and JPEG. GIF is more common and is best for small images that contain 256 colors of less. JPEG is best for very large images that are composed of many colors, such as scanned photographs.

JPEG allows different image quality settings. The higher the quality, the better the image--but the larger the file. "Normal" quality is the default and should be sufficient for most images. You may select a different quality setting from the "Quality" menu. Note: JPEG output requires Apple's QuickTime to be installed. If it is not installed, Terry Morse Myrmidon will ask you to first install QuickTime or change the File format setting to GIF.

When you convert a document, each image is saved as an individual file in a folder called "imgs." The Imgs folder is stored in the same place as the HTML files. Image files will have either a ".gif" or a ".jpeg" file extension, depending on the File format setting.

When copying the converted Web pages to a Web server, the HTML files and the imgs folder should be copied into the same folder on the server.