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Windows Icons(1)            General Commands Manual           Windows Icons(1)

NAME
       Microsoft Windows icon files

DESCRIPTION
       A  Microsoft  Windows icon file contains one or more images, at resolu-
       tions up to 256 by 256 pixels and various bpp values.  The  images  are
       encoded  either as Portable Network Graphics file (PNG), or in a format
       similar to Microsoft's BMP format.

       If encoded as BMP, the image includes an  "AND  mask",  which  contains
       1-bit  transparency  data.  It may also contain additional 8-bit trans-
       parency data together with the color information.

   Color Depth
       Except for the 16 bits per pixel images and  images  with  bit  fields,
       which  both are rare, the colors in all BMP encoded images are RGB with
       8 bits per channel.  Images with bpp values lower than 16  use  a  pal-
       ette.

       I.e.  the  bpp value gives the number of distinct colors, not the color
       depth.

   XOR Mask and AND Mask
       BMP encoded images contain two pixel maps:  The  so-called  "XOR  mask"
       stores  the color information for each pixel, and the "AND mask" stores
       the transparency belonging to it.

       The names and the function of these maps are most easily understood  by
       looking  at  how a 1-bpp icon image is rendered on a monochrome screen:
       The pixels on the screen are logically AND-ed with the bits on the  AND
       mask,  then  the  result  is  logically XOR-ed with the bits on the XOR
       mask.

       The result is that if a bit on the AND mask is reset, the corresponding
       bit  on  the  XOR mask determines the color of the pixel on the screen.
       If a bit in the AND mask is set and the corresponding bit  in  the  XOR
       mask  is black (reset), the image is transparent.  Finally, if the bits
       are set in both the AND and XOR mask (the pixel  on  the  XOR  mask  is
       white), the background of the screen is inverted.

       In  color environments, a pixel on the XOR mask outside the opaque area
       of the image is usually black and sometimes white, but  a  color  other
       than black and white will hardly give predictable results.

       Since  Windows  XP,  there may also be an 8-bit transparency channel in
       32-bpp BMP encoded icon images. The AND mask,  however,  is  still  re-
       quired and used e.g. for generating shadows.

       PNG  encoded images don't contain AND masks.  While rendering a PNG en-
       coded image, Windows constructs an AND mask on the fly from the  trans-
       parency channel, if present.

   Evolution of Windows Icons
       The Windows icon file format has undergone some extensions since it was
       invented in the mid-eighties for Windows 1:

       •      Windows 1 used monochrome 32x32 icons only.

       •      Windows 3.0 added color icons with bpp values up to 8.

       •      Windows 4.0 (a.k.a. Windows95) added option  for  32-bpp  images
              and resolutions up to 256 by 256.

       •      NT 5.1  (a.k.a. Windows XP) added option for the 8-bit transpar-
              ency channel in the unused bits of 32-bpp images.

       •      NT 6.0 (a.k.a. Windows Vista) added option for PNG  encoded  im-
              ages

   Common Resolutions and BPP Values
       Typical resolutions and bpp values of the Windows shell icons include:

       ────────────────────────────────────────────────
       OS             resolutions           bpp values
       Windows 3      32x32                 1, 4

       Windows 4      16x16, 32x32, 48x48   4, 8
       NT 5           16x16, 32x32, 48x48   4, 8, 32
       NT 6           16x16, 32x32, 48x48   4, 8, 32
       24x24, 96x96   8, 32

       256x256        32 (PNG encoded)

       Within the icon file, the images with low bpp values are usually stored
       first.  With the same bpp value, the images are sorted  by  resolution,
       large images first.

   MIME Type and File Name Extension
       The  MIME  type  of  Windows  icon  files  is registered by IANA as im-
       age/vnd.microsoft.icon, but the unofficial name image/x-icon  is  still
       widely used.

       The  file  name  extension (used by Microsoft operating systems as file
       type identifier) is .ico.

DOCUMENT SOURCE
       This manual page was generated by the Netpbm tool 'makeman'  from  HTML
       source.  The master documentation is at

              http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/doc/winicon.html

netpbm documentation             12 April 2013                Windows Icons(1)

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