On Fri, Sep 24, 2021 at 7:11 AM Eli the Bearded <*@eli.users.panix.com> wrote: > > In comp.lang.python, Christian Gollwitzer <aurio...@gmx.de> wrote: > > Am 22.09.21 um 16:52 schrieb Michael F. Stemper: > >> On 21/09/2021 19.30, Eli the Bearded wrote: > >>> Yes, CSV files can model that. But it would not be my first choice of > >>> data format. (Neither would JSON.) I'd probably use XML. > >> Okay. 'Go not to the elves for counsel, for they will say both no > >> and yes.' (I'm not actually surprised to find differences of opinion.) > > Well, I have a recommendation with my answer. > > > It's the same as saying "CSV supports images". Of course it doesn't, its > > a textfile, but you could encode a JPEG as base64 and then put this > > string into the cell of a CSV table. That definitely isn't what a sane > > person would understand as "support". > > I'd use one of the netpbm formats instead of JPEG. PBM for one bit > bitmaps, PGM for one channel (typically grayscale), PPM for three > channel RGB, and PAM for anything else (two channel gray plus alpha, > CMYK, RGBA, HSV, YCbCr, and more exotic formats). JPEG is tricky to > map to CSV since it is a three channel format (YCbCr), where the > channels are typically not at the same resolution. Usually Y is full > size and the Cb and Cr channels are one quarter size ("4:2:0 chroma > subsampling"). The unequal size of the channels does not lend itself > to CSV, but I can't say it's impossible. >
Examine prior art, and I truly do mean art, from Matt Parker: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UBX2QQHlQ_I ChrisA -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list