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Dots per inch (DPI) is a measure of printing resolution, in particular the number of individual dots of ink a printer or toner can produce within a linear one-inch space.
Up to a point, printers with higher DPI produce clearer and more detailed output. A printer does not necessarily have a single DPI measurement; it is dependent on the print mode, which is usually influenced by driver settings. The range of DPI supported by a printer is most dependent on the print head technology it uses. A dot matrix printer, for example, applies ink via tiny rods striking an ink ribbon, and has a relatively low resolution, typically in the range of 60 to 90 DPI. An inkjet printer sprays ink through tiny nozzles, and is typically capable of 360 DPI. A laser printer applies toner through a controlled electrostatic charge, and may be in the range of 600 to 1800 DPI.
The DPI measurement of a printer often needs to be considerably higher than the pixels per inch (PPI) measurement of a video display in order to produce similar-quality output. This is due to the limited range of colours for each dot typically available on a printer. At each dot position, the simplest type of colour printer can only either print no dot, or a dot consisting of a fixed volume of ink in each of four colour channels (typically CMYK). At each pixel, most video monitors can produce up to 256 intensities of light in each of three channels (RGB). The number of unique dot colours for the printer is therefore 24 = 16 (actually less since the black channel is partly redundant), while the number of unique pixel colours for the monitor is 2563 = 16777216. While some colour printers can produce variable drop volumes at each dot position, and may use additional ink colour channels, the number of colours is still typically less than on a monitor. Most printers must therefore produce additional colours through a halftone or dithering process. The exception to this rule is a Dye-sublimation printer that utilizes a printing method more akin to Pixels per inch.
The printing process could require a region from four to six dots on each side in order to faithfully reproduce the color contained in a single pixel. An image that is 100 pixels wide may need to be 400 to 600 dots in width in the printed output; if a 100×100-pixel image is to be printed inside a one-inch square, the printer must be capable of 400 to 600 dots per inch in order to accurately reproduce the image.
There are some ongoing efforts to abandon the dpi in favor of giving the inter-dot spacing in micrometres (µm). This is however hindered by leading companies located in the USA, one of the few remaining countries to not use the metric system exclusively. A resolution of 72 dpi for example equals an inter-dot spacing of about 350 µm, 96 dpi → 265 µm, 160 dpi → 160 µm, 300 dpi → 85 µm, 4000 dpi → 6.4 µm. Going the other way, 1 µm → 25400 dpi, 30 µm → 850 dpi, 200 µm → 127 dpi. Note that 25400 = 1 dpi·µm, so dividing 25400 by a measurement in one of these units gives the measurement in the other unit.
Some have also proposed using dpcm.
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Misuses of DPI measurement
Owing in part to its conceptual similarity with other measurements of graphical resolution, the DPI measurement is frequently misused. For instance, it is common for an image scanner's sampling resolution to be specified in terms of DPI, though a more accurate measurement would be samples per inch. The number of pixels per inch in a computer display is sometimes specified in this way as well. Usage of the DPI measurement in these cases is inaccurate and misleading, though the intended meaning is usually clear based on context.
Another misuse results from an incomplete understanding of what the DPI measurement means. In order for any "per inch" measurement to be meaningful, some number of inches must be specified. A digital image captured by a scanner or digital camera may have an intended resolution (in pixels per inch), but this need not correspond to the DPI at which it is printed. For example, a 1000×1000-pixel image could be printed at 4×4 inches and 250 pixels per inch, or at 10×10 inches and 100 pixels per inch. Digital images contain some number of pixels; the size at which they are printed is relatively arbitrary. When someone asks for a "300 DPI image", they may be expecting an image with 300 pixels per inch of printed output; unless the size of the printed output is known beforehand, the measurement is meaningless. A more complete specification would include the desired print size in addition to the number of desired pixels per inch. A yet more complete specification would also include the DPI capability of the printer that will be used to print the image; if the printer is only capable of faithfully reproducing 100 pixels per inch, there is no reason to use a higher-resolution image.
An example of misuse of the DPI scale would be if an LCD monitor manufacturer claimed that a 1280 x 1024 resolution monitor actually had a resolution of 3840 x 1024, (three times the resolution), because each pixel was made of three colored dots, (Red, Green and Blue). Technically they would be correct but compared to the standard accepted practise of using whole pixels as a means to measure resolution a customer may be confused into thinking the monitor relabelled as 3840 x 1024 had a greater resolution and therefore better picture quality when in actual fact it would be exactly the same as standard labeled monitors. This misuse is generally used when advertising in-car lcd monitors.
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See also
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