The patent badge is an abbreviated version of the USPTO patent document. The patent badge does contain a link to the full patent document.
The patent badge is an abbreviated version of the USPTO patent document. The patent badge covers the following: Patent number, Date patent was issued, Date patent was filed, Title of the patent, Applicant, Inventor, Assignee, Attorney firm, Primary examiner, Assistant examiner, CPCs, and Abstract. The patent badge does contain a link to the full patent document (in Adobe Acrobat format, aka pdf). To download or print any patent click here.
Patent No.:
Date of Patent:
Dec. 15, 1998
Filed:
Aug. 27, 1996
Michael David Cooper, San Jose, CA (US);
Michael L Hodgson, Saratoga, CA (US);
Patrick Swee-Hock Ong, Palo Alto, CA (US);
James G Sandman, Jr, Los Altos Hills, CA (US);
Paul D Rovner, Palo Alto, CA (US);
Edward Reid Fiala, Sunnyvale, CA (US);
Adobe Systems Incorporated, Mountain View, CA (US);
Abstract
A page printer uses alternative internal representations for the print data in each of multiple lateral strips that make up the page. Page description language input is converted to an intermediate display list format that is sorted into display commands associated with each strip. If during input the display list representation of the data fills the memory allotted to its storage, one or more of the strips is converted from display list format to raster format and compressed using a lossless compression algorithm. If storage of compressed strips subsequently exceeds available memory, raster data is further compressed using a lossy compression algorithm. Additional display list commands are rasterized by decompressing the compressed strips, processing the new commands and recompressing the data using lossless or lossy compression as required. If the display list does not overflow memory during input, the complete strips are rasterized and compressed one at a time in the order in which they will be printed. The rasterizing time is stored. Should memory overflow at any point in the process, then the rasterizing times for the remaining strips are determined without storing the raster output. A decision can then be made for each strip to rasterize it to the print engine on the fly, pre-compute and store it as lossless compressed raster data, or revert to a lossy-compressed pre-computed version.