Cory Papenfuss wrote:

A digital camera RAW file is not a picture, it should be nothing more
nor less than the raw data as read from the CCD (possibly with some form
of lossless compression) so it makes no sense comparing it to image
formats
===========
Which, in point of fact, is why most people recommend using it over any image
format.


    For a Pentax RAW file, it *IS* an image format.

Yes. And as I was trying to say earlier, there is no law saying that you have to represent the pixels as read, green and blue values for the same location to call the data "a picture" or the format an "image format". The bayer pattern data is just another way to describe an image. You may actually say that it's a different image from the RGB data you might convert it to, because the latter also has some interpolated data - but *of course* the file data represents a picture!

It's a TIFF. It's not an RGB TIFF like one may be used to seeing. If you were to load up the image, you'll see a monochrome image of the picture. The value of a monochrome pixels will be the luminance component of the image shot, weighted by the tranmissivity of the pigment in the particular sensor pixel.

And like I said, more or less, if Pentax had bothered, they might have tried to introduce an extension to the TIFF format allowing the colour model to be set to, "bayer pattern data" or whatever, and perhaps rules for transformation to RGB to be stored as TIFF tags...

But we're discussing minor details here, of course, I must have little to do these days... Yep, I have, come to think of it; I'm on sick leave as a result of the fact that I tried something called "sports" last week...

- Toralf



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