Article ID: 198233 - Last Review: October 7, 2004 - Revision: 1.1 Animated GIFs only animate in programs that support animation in Publisher 2000This article was previously published under Q198233 For a Microsoft Publisher 98 version of this article,
see
191396
(http://support.microsoft.com/kb/191396/
)
. SUMMARY If you insert an animated GIF image into a Publisher file,
it does not appear to be animated. However, if you save your publication in
HyperText Markup Language (HTML) format (as a Web page), the animated GIF does
animate when you view that Web page in a Web browser that supports animated
GIFs. NOTE: When viewing an animated GIF in Microsoft Clip Gallery version 5.0, you can click the Play icon to view the animation effect in a separate window. MORE INFORMATION CompuServe Graphics Interchange Format (GIF) version 89a
supports storing multiple pictures in a single .gif file. If a .gif file
contains several pictures, each with slight variations from one picture to
another, that file is referred to as an "animated GIF." Many Web browsers, (including Microsoft Internet Explorer and Netscape Navigator, are designed so that when they display a .gif file that contains multiple pictures, they display the individual pictures in sequence. Unlike the Microsoft Video for Windows (.avi) and Apple QuickTime Movie formats, the GIF format is designed primarily to display static pictures, not animated images. The most common reason to create an animated GIF is to incorporate multimedia effects in HTML documents on the World Wide Web. For this reason, programs that display animation effects fall into one of these categories:
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