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in the previous video of this series you saw that a bitmap is a rectangular grid of cells called pixels a bitmap image is also known as a raster image there are three fundamental properties of a bitmap image the number of pixels which can be calculated by multiplying the width in pixels by the height in pixels the resolution which depends on the size of the pixels the smaller the pixels the greater the density of pixels so the higher the resolution and the better the quality of the image resolution is measured in dots per inch the color depth thats the number of bits used to encode the color of each pixel more bits per pixel means that more different colors can be used in the image if necessary with 8 bits per pixel a bitmap can have up to 2 to the power 8 thats 256 different colors this 8-bit image looks pretty good but you might have noticed some banding in the sky in the previous video of this series you also saw that we can calculate the amount of memory a bitmap needs by multip