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Rasterization

Converting vector content (text, shapes, lines) into a grid of pixels — a raster image. Often a deliberate step for redaction or compression; sometimes an unwanted side effect.

Rasterization is the conversion of vector-based content (text, lines, shapes defined as mathematical instructions) into raster content (a grid of colored pixels). Vector content scales cleanly to any size; raster content is fixed at its pixel resolution.

When rasterization happens

  • PDF to image conversion. When you export a PDF page as a JPG or PNG, every element on the page is rasterized to pixels at a chosen DPI.
  • Aggressive compression. Very high compression levels may rasterize text into images to save space — this loses searchability but maximizes size reduction.
  • True redaction. Redacting a PDF properly often involves rasterizing the affected page so the hidden text literally ceases to exist.
  • Printing. Even when printing a PDF, the printer ultimately rasterizes everything to its native resolution.

Rasterization trade-offs

Gained:

  • A page becomes a single image, which cannot reveal hidden content (important for redaction)
  • Guaranteed identical rendering everywhere — no font substitutions, no reflow

Lost:

  • Text becomes pixels, so search and copy-paste no longer work
  • File size usually grows if the original was text-heavy (text compresses extremely well; images don't)
  • Editing becomes harder — you can no longer click a word and change it

Tools that use rasterization

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