DjVu

English

Alternative forms

Etymology

From deja vu, from French déjà-vu, q.v.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /ˌdiːd͡ʒeɪˈviːju/, /ˌdiːd͡ʒeɪˈvu/, /ˌdeɪ.ʒɑː ˈvuː/

Noun

DjVu (countable and uncountable, plural DjVus)

  1. (computing, uncountable) A file format intended to represent electronic documents, particularly scanned text.
    • 2021, Alexander Thomasian, Storage Systems..., §2.13.7:
      DjVu was developed at AT&T Research by Yan[sic] LeCun et al. in 1966. It generates files that are smaller than PDF files. [] PDF primarily encodes graphics and text as vectorized data, whereas DjVu primarily encodes them as pixmap images.
    • 2022 April 26, Juha Saarinen, "Google's VirusTotal Service Vulnerable for Over Eight Months", iTnews:
      DjVu is a relatively old and no longer developed file format devised by AT&T, used to store scanned images. None of the VirusTotal anti-virus scanners detected the CySource researchers' Base64 encoded payload added to the metadata of the malicious DjVu file. The researchers found that "instead of exiftool detecting the metadata of the file it executes our payload."
  2. (computing, countable) A file encoded in the DjVu format.

Descendants

  • Translingual: .djv, .djvu