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{{Short description|Data compression technique}}
{{other uses|IFrame (disambiguation)}}
{{Multiple issues|
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{{Technical|date=June 2019}}
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'''Intra-frame coding''' is a [[data compression]] technique used within a [[digital video|video]] frame, enabling smaller file sizes and lower bitrates
Intra-frame prediction exploits spatial redundancy, i.e. correlation among pixels within one frame, by calculating prediction values through extrapolation from already coded pixels for effective [[delta coding]]. It is one of the two classes of predictive coding methods in [[video coding]]. Its counterpart is inter-frame prediction which exploits temporal redundancy. Temporally independently coded so-called intra frames use only intra coding. The temporally coded [[predicted frame]]s (e.g. MPEG's P- and B-frames) may use intra- as well as inter-frame prediction.
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[[File:Pixel-prediction.svg|thumb|128px|Usually known adjacent samples (or blocks) are above, above left, above right, and left (A–D).]]
Usually only few of the spatially closest known samples are used for the extrapolation. Formats that operate sample by sample like [[Portable Network Graphics]] (PNG) can usually use one of four adjacent pixels (above, above left, above right, left) or some function of them like e.g. their average. Block-based (frequency transform) formats prefill whole blocks with prediction values extrapolated from usually one or two straight lines of pixels that run along their top and left borders.
Inter frame has been specified by the [[CCITT]] in 1988–1990 by [[H.261]] for the first time. H.261 was meant for teleconferencing and ISDN telephoning.
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