List of computer display standards: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
imported>Kvng
m compound modifier
 
imported>Kvng
m <br> -> <br />
 
Line 46: Line 46:
|Quarter Quarter Video Graphics Array
|Quarter Quarter Video Graphics Array
|Used on some portable devices, and is a common alternative resolution to QCIF for [[webcam]]s and other online video streams in low-bandwidth situations, and on video modes of early and later low-end digital cameras.
|Used on some portable devices, and is a common alternative resolution to QCIF for [[webcam]]s and other online video streams in low-bandwidth situations, and on video modes of early and later low-end digital cameras.
|160×120 (19k)
|{{resx|160|120}} (19k)
|160
|160
|120 <!------------------------------- 120 ------------------------------->
|120 <!------------------------------- 120 ------------------------------->
Line 56: Line 56:
!UNNAMED
!UNNAMED
|UNNAMED
|UNNAMED
|A common size for LCDs manufactured for small consumer electronics, basic mobile phones and feature phones, typically in a 1.7" to 1.9" diagonal size. This LCD is often used in portrait (128×160) orientation. The unusual 5:4 [[Aspect ratio (image)|aspect ratio]] makes the display slightly different from QQVGA dimensions.
|A common size for LCDs manufactured for small consumer electronics, basic mobile phones and feature phones, typically in a 1.7" to 1.9" diagonal size. This LCD is often used in portrait ({{resx|128|160}}) orientation. The unusual 5:4 [[Aspect ratio (image)|aspect ratio]] makes the display slightly different from QQVGA dimensions.
|160×128 (20k)
|{{resx|160|128}} (20k)
|160
|160
|128 <!------------------------------- 128 ------------------------------->
|128 <!------------------------------- 128 ------------------------------->
Line 68: Line 68:
|UNNAMED
|UNNAMED
|A shared size for older portable video game systems. The nearly-square (but landscape) aspect ratio and coarse pixel resolution gave these games a characteristic visual style. Colour depth ranged from 4 colours (2&nbsp;[[Bits per pixel|bpp]]) with the original [[Game Boy]], through 16–32 colours (4–5&nbsp;bpp) with the [[Game Gear]], to a maximum of 56 colours (equivalent of 6&nbsp;bpp) from a wider palette with the [[Game Boy Color]]. Also appears as a YouTube resolution option ("144p"){{citation needed|date=May 2023}}.
|A shared size for older portable video game systems. The nearly-square (but landscape) aspect ratio and coarse pixel resolution gave these games a characteristic visual style. Colour depth ranged from 4 colours (2&nbsp;[[Bits per pixel|bpp]]) with the original [[Game Boy]], through 16–32 colours (4–5&nbsp;bpp) with the [[Game Gear]], to a maximum of 56 colours (equivalent of 6&nbsp;bpp) from a wider palette with the [[Game Boy Color]]. Also appears as a YouTube resolution option ("144p"){{citation needed|date=May 2023}}.
|160×144 (23k)
|{{resx|160|144}} (23k)
|160
|160
|144 <!------------------------------- 144 ------------------------------->
|144 <!------------------------------- 144 ------------------------------->
Line 79: Line 79:
|Half Quarter Video Graphics Array
|Half Quarter Video Graphics Array
|Used with some smaller, cheaper portable devices, including the Nintendo [[Game Boy Advance]].
|Used with some smaller, cheaper portable devices, including the Nintendo [[Game Boy Advance]].
|240×160 (38k)
|{{resx|240|160}} (38k)
|240
|240
|160 <!------------------------------- 160 ------------------------------->
|160 <!------------------------------- 160 ------------------------------->
Line 90: Line 90:
|Atari ST (etc.) Colour, Broadcast-standard
|Atari ST (etc.) Colour, Broadcast-standard
|[[Atari ST]] line. Colour modes using [[NTSC]] or [[PAL]]-compliant televisions, and monochrome, composite video or RGB-component monitors.
|[[Atari ST]] line. Colour modes using [[NTSC]] or [[PAL]]-compliant televisions, and monochrome, composite video or RGB-component monitors.
|640×200,<br>320×200
|{{resx|640|200}},<br />{{resx|320|200}}
|640
|640
|200 <!------------------------------- 200 ------------------------------->
|200 <!------------------------------- 200 ------------------------------->
Line 101: Line 101:
|Color Graphics Adapter
|Color Graphics Adapter
|Introduced in 1981 by IBM, as the first colour display standard for the [[IBM PC]]. The standard CGA graphics cards were equipped with 16&nbsp;kB video RAM.<ref name="Mueller92"/>
|Introduced in 1981 by IBM, as the first colour display standard for the [[IBM PC]]. The standard CGA graphics cards were equipped with 16&nbsp;kB video RAM.<ref name="Mueller92"/>
|640×200 (128k)<br />320×200 (64k)<br />160×200 (32k)
|{{resx|640|200}} (128k)<br />{{resx|320|200}} (64k)<br />{{resx|160|200}} (32k)
|640
|640
|200 <!------------------------------- 200 ------------------------------->
|200 <!------------------------------- 200 ------------------------------->
Line 111: Line 111:
![[Quarter Video Graphics Array|QVGA]]
![[Quarter Video Graphics Array|QVGA]]
|Quarter Video Graphics Array
|Quarter Video Graphics Array
|Half the resolution in each dimension as standard VGA. First appeared as a VESA mode (134h=256 color, 135h=Hi-Color) that primarily allowed 80x30 character text with graphics, and should not be confused with CGA (320x200); QVGA is normally used when describing screens on portable devices (PDAs, pocket media players, feature phones, smartphones, etc.). No set colour depth or refresh rate is associated with this standard or those that follow, as it is dependent both on the manufacturing quality of the screen and the capabilities of the attached display driver hardware, and almost always incorporates an LCD panel with no visible line-scanning. However, it would typically be in the 8-to-12&nbsp;bpp (256–4096 colours) through 18&nbsp;bpp (262,144 colours) range.
|Half the resolution in each dimension as standard VGA. First appeared as a VESA mode (134h=256 color, 135h=Hi-Color) that primarily allowed {{resx|80|30}} character text with graphics, and should not be confused with CGA ({{resx|320|200}}); QVGA is normally used when describing screens on portable devices (PDAs, pocket media players, feature phones, smartphones, etc.). No set colour depth or refresh rate is associated with this standard or those that follow, as it is dependent both on the manufacturing quality of the screen and the capabilities of the attached display driver hardware, and almost always incorporates an LCD panel with no visible line-scanning. However, it would typically be in the 8-to-12&nbsp;bpp (256–4096 colours) through 18&nbsp;bpp (262,144 colours) range.
|320×240 (77k)
|{{resx|320|240}} (77k)
|320
|320
|240 <!------------------------------- 240 ------------------------------->
|240 <!------------------------------- 240 ------------------------------->
Line 122: Line 122:
!TV Computer
!TV Computer
|Non-interlaced TV-as-monitor
|Non-interlaced TV-as-monitor
|Various [[Apple Inc.|Apple]], [[Atari]], [[Commodore computers|Commodore]], [[Sinclair computers|Sinclair]], [[Acorn computers|Acorn]], [[Tandy Radio Shack|Tandy]] and other [[Home computer|home]] and small-office computers introduced from 1977 through to the mid-1980s. They used televisions for display output and had a typical usable screen resolution from 102–320 pixels wide and usually 192–256 lines high, in non-interlaced (NI) mode for a more stable image (displaying a full image on each 1/50th / 1/60th-second field, instead of splitting it across each frame). The limited resolution led to displays with a characteristic wide overscan border around the active area. Some more powerful machines were able to display higher horizontal resolutions—either in text-mode alone or in low-colour bitmap graphics, and typically by halving the width of each pixel, rather than physically expanding the display area—but were still confined in the vertical dimension by the relatively slow horizontal scanning rate of a domestic TV set. These same standards—albeit with progressively greater colour depth and upstream graphical processing ability—would see extended use and popularity in TV-connected game consoles right through to the end of the 20th century.
|Various [[Apple Inc.|Apple]], [[Atari]], [[Commodore computers|Commodore]], [[Sinclair computers|Sinclair]], [[Acorn computers|Acorn]], [[Tandy Radio Shack|Tandy]] and other [[Home computer|home]] and small-office computers introduced from 1977 through to the mid-1980s. They used televisions for display output and had a typical usable screen resolution from 102–320 pixels wide and usually 192–256 lines high, in non-interlaced (NI) mode for a more stable image (displaying a full image on each {{Frac|1|50th}}/{{Frac|1|60th}}-second field, instead of splitting it across each frame). The limited resolution led to displays with a characteristic wide overscan border around the active area. Some more powerful machines were able to display higher horizontal resolutions—either in text-mode alone or in low-colour bitmap graphics, and typically by halving the width of each pixel, rather than physically expanding the display area—but were still confined in the vertical dimension by the relatively slow horizontal scanning rate of a domestic TV set. These same standards—albeit with progressively greater colour depth and upstream graphical processing ability—would see extended use and popularity in TV-connected game consoles right through to the end of the 20th century.
|640×256 NI (high-end), 320×200 NI (typical), 140×192 NI (low-end)
|{{resx|640|256}} NI (high-end), {{resx|320|200}} NI (typical), {{resx|140|192}} NI (low-end)
|640
|640
|256 <!------------------------------- 256 ------------------------------->
|256 <!------------------------------- 256 ------------------------------->
Line 133: Line 133:
![[Wide QVGA|WQVGA]]  
![[Wide QVGA|WQVGA]]  
|Wide Quarter Video Graphics Array
|Wide Quarter Video Graphics Array
|Effectively 1/16 the total resolution (1/4 in each dimension) of "Full HD", but with the height aligned to an 8-pixel "macroblock" boundary. Common in small-screen video applications, including portable DVD players and the [[Sony PlayStation Portable|Sony PSP]].
|Effectively {{Frac|1|16}} the total resolution ({{Frac|1|4}} in each dimension) of "Full HD", but with the height aligned to an 8-pixel "macroblock" boundary. Common in small-screen video applications, including portable DVD players and the [[Sony PlayStation Portable|Sony PSP]].
|480×272 (131k)
|{{resx|480|272}} (131k)
|480
|480
|272 <!------------------------------- 272 ------------------------------->
|272 <!------------------------------- 272 ------------------------------->
|130,560
|130,560
|~1% narrower than 16:9 (30:17 exact)
|c. 1% narrower than 16:9 (30:17 exact)
|
|


Line 144: Line 144:
![[Macintosh 128K|Mac]] Mono 9"
![[Macintosh 128K|Mac]] Mono 9"
|Original Apple Macintosh display
|Original Apple Macintosh display
|The single fixed-screen mode used in first-generation (128k and 512k) Apple Mac computers, launched in 1984, with a monochrome 9" CRT integrated into the body of the computer. Used to display one of the first mass-market full-time GUIs, and one of the earliest non-interlaced default displays with more than 256 lines of vertical resolution. (Early models used a 384×256 screen; both standards are cut down from the 720×364 of the preceding [[Apple Lisa|Lisa]] model)
|The single fixed-screen mode used in first-generation (128k and 512k) Apple Mac computers, launched in 1984, with a monochrome 9" CRT integrated into the body of the computer. Used to display one of the first mass-market full-time GUIs, and one of the earliest non-interlaced default displays with more than 256 lines of vertical resolution. (Early models used a {{resx|384|256}} screen; both standards are cut down from the {{resx|720|364}} of the preceding [[Apple Lisa|Lisa]] model)
|512×342 (175k)
|{{resx|512|342}} (175k)
|512
|512
|342 <!------------------------------- 342 ------------------------------->
|342 <!------------------------------- 342 ------------------------------->
Line 156: Line 156:
|
|
|A monochrome display capable of sharp text and graphics for its time. Very popular with the [[Lotus 1-2-3]] spreadsheet application, which was one of PC's first [[killer application|killer apps]]. Introduced in 1982.
|A monochrome display capable of sharp text and graphics for its time. Very popular with the [[Lotus 1-2-3]] spreadsheet application, which was one of PC's first [[killer application|killer apps]]. Introduced in 1982.
|720×348 (251k)
|{{resx|720|348}} (251k)
|720
|720
|348 <!------------------------------- 348 ------------------------------->
|348 <!------------------------------- 348 ------------------------------->
Line 166: Line 166:
![[Enhanced Graphics Adapter|EGA]]
![[Enhanced Graphics Adapter|EGA]]
|Enhanced Graphics Adapter
|Enhanced Graphics Adapter
|Introduced in 1984 by IBM. A resolution of 640×350 pixels of 16 different colours in 4 bits per pixel (bpp), selectable from a 64-colour [[Palette (computing)|palette]] in 2 bits per each of red-green-blue (RGB) unit.<ref name="Mueller92"/> Other commonly used modes were the existing CGA 320×200 and 640×200 resolutions in 4&nbsp;bpp, with a fixed palette corresponding to the 16 colours available in CGA text mode, allowing an EGA card to be used in full colour with an unmodified CGA monitor by setting the correct [[DIP switch]] options; plus full EGA resolution (and CGA hi-res) in monochrome, if installed memory was insufficient for full colour at above 320×200.
|Introduced in 1984 by IBM. A resolution of {{resx|640|350}} pixels of 16 different colours in 4 bits per pixel (bpp), selectable from a 64-colour [[Palette (computing)|palette]] in 2 bits per each of red-green-blue (RGB) unit.<ref name="Mueller92"/> Other commonly used modes were the existing CGA {{resx|320|200}} and {{resx|640|200}} resolutions in 4&nbsp;bpp, with a fixed palette corresponding to the 16 colours available in CGA text mode, allowing an EGA card to be used in full colour with an unmodified CGA monitor by setting the correct [[DIP switch]] options; plus full EGA resolution (and CGA hi-res) in monochrome, if installed memory was insufficient for full colour at above {{resx|320|200}}.
|640×350 (224k), 640×200 (128k), 320×200 (64k)
|{{resx|640|350}} (224k), {{resx|640|200}} (128k), {{resx|320|200}} (64k)
|640
|640
|350 <!------------------------------- 350 ------------------------------->
|350 <!------------------------------- 350 ------------------------------->
Line 177: Line 177:
![[Monochrome Display Adapter|MDA]]
![[Monochrome Display Adapter|MDA]]
|Monochrome Display Adapter
|Monochrome Display Adapter
|The original standard on [[IBM Personal Computer|IBM PCs]] and [[IBM Personal Computer XT|IBM PC XTs]] with 4&nbsp;[[kilobyte|kB]] [[video RAM]]. Introduced in 1981 by [[IBM]]. Supports [[text mode]] only.<ref name=Mueller92>{{Citation |first=Scott |last=Mueller |title=Upgrading and Repairing PCs |edition=2nd |publisher=Que Books |year=1992 |isbn=0-88022-856-3 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/upgradingrepairi0000muel_2ndedition/page/669 669–92] |url=https://archive.org/details/upgradingrepairi0000muel_2ndedition/page/669 }}</ref>
|The original standard on [[IBM Personal Computer|IBM PCs]] and [[IBM Personal Computer XT|IBM PC XTs]] with 4&nbsp;[[kilobyte|kB]] [[video RAM]]. Introduced in 1981 by [[IBM]]. Supports [[text mode]] only.<ref name=Mueller92>{{Citation |first=Scott |last=Mueller |title=Upgrading and Repairing PCs |url=https://archive.org/details/upgradingrepairi0000muel_2ndedition/page/669  |edition=2nd |publisher=Que Books |year=1992 |isbn=0-88022-856-3 |pages=[https://archive.org/details/upgradingrepairi0000muel_2ndedition/page/669 669–92]}}</ref>
|720×350 (252k)
|{{resx|720|350}} (252k)
|720
|720
|350 <!------------------------------- 350 ------------------------------->
|350 <!------------------------------- 350 ------------------------------->
Line 189: Line 189:
|
|
|A monochrome display that expanded [[Monochrome Display Adapter]]'s capabilities with graphics. Introduced in 1982.
|A monochrome display that expanded [[Monochrome Display Adapter]]'s capabilities with graphics. Introduced in 1982.
|720×350
|{{resx|720|350}}
|720
|720
|350 <!------------------------------- 350 ------------------------------->
|350 <!------------------------------- 350 ------------------------------->
Line 199: Line 199:
!ST High Resolution
!ST High Resolution
|Atari ST (etc.) Monochrome, proprietary standard
|Atari ST (etc.) Monochrome, proprietary standard
|[[Atari ST]] line. High resolution monochrome mode using a custom non-interlaced monitor with the slightly lower vertical resolution (in order to be an integer multiple of low and medium resolution and thus utilize the same amount of RAM for the framebuffer) allowing a "flicker free" 71.25&nbsp;Hz refresh rate, higher even than the highest refresh rate provided by VGA. All machines in the ST series could also use colour or monochrome VGA monitors with a proper cable or physical adapter, and all but the TT could display 640x400 at 71.25&nbsp;Hz on VGA monitors.
|[[Atari ST]] line. High resolution monochrome mode using a custom non-interlaced monitor with the slightly lower vertical resolution (in order to be an integer multiple of low and medium resolution and thus utilize the same amount of RAM for the framebuffer) allowing a "flicker free" 71.25&nbsp;Hz refresh rate, higher even than the highest refresh rate provided by VGA. All machines in the ST series could also use colour or monochrome VGA monitors with a proper cable or physical adapter, and all but the TT could display {{resx|640|400}} at 71.25&nbsp;Hz on VGA monitors.
|640×400
|{{resx|640|400}}
|640
|640
|400 <!------------------------------- 400 ------------------------------->
|400 <!------------------------------- 400 ------------------------------->
Line 210: Line 210:
![[PowerBook]] internal panel
![[PowerBook]] internal panel
|PowerBook, early generations
|PowerBook, early generations
|The first PowerBook, released in 1991, replaced the original Mac Portable (basically an original Mac with an LCD, keyboard and trackball in a lunchbox-style shell), and introduced a new 640×400 greyscale screen. This was joined in 1993 with the PowerBook 165c, which kept the same resolution but added colour capability similar to that of Mac II (256 colours from a palette of 16.7 million).
|The first PowerBook, released in 1991, replaced the original Mac Portable (basically an original Mac with an LCD, keyboard and trackball in a lunchbox-style shell), and introduced a new {{resx|640|400}} greyscale screen. This was joined in 1993 with the PowerBook 165c, which kept the same resolution but added colour capability similar to that of Mac II (256 colours from a palette of 16.7 million).
|640×400 (256k)
|{{resx|640|400}} (256k)
|640
|640
|400 <!------------------------------- 400 ------------------------------->
|400 <!------------------------------- 400 ------------------------------->
|256,000
|256,000
|16:10 / 8:5 (square pixels)
|16:10/8:5 (square pixels)
|8&nbsp;bpp
|8&nbsp;bpp


Line 222: Line 222:
|
|
|With on-board 2D and 3D acceleration introduced in 1984 for the 8-bit PC-bus, intended for CAD applications, a triple-board display adapter with built-in processor, and displaying high-resolution, full-colour graphics at a 60&nbsp;Hz frame rate.<ref name="Mueller92"/>
|With on-board 2D and 3D acceleration introduced in 1984 for the 8-bit PC-bus, intended for CAD applications, a triple-board display adapter with built-in processor, and displaying high-resolution, full-colour graphics at a 60&nbsp;Hz frame rate.<ref name="Mueller92"/>
|640×480 (307k)
|{{resx|640|480}} (307k)
|640
|640
|480 <!------------------------------- 480 ------------------------------->
|480 <!------------------------------- 480 ------------------------------->
Line 232: Line 232:
![[Multi-Color Graphics Array|MCGA]]
![[Multi-Color Graphics Array|MCGA]]
|Multi-Color Graphics Array
|Multi-Color Graphics Array
|Introduced by IBM on [[Industry Standard Architecture|ISA]]-based [[IBM Personal System/2|PS/2]] models in 1987, with reduced cost compared to [[VGA]]. MCGA had a 320×200 256-colour (from a 262,144 colour [[Palette (computing)|palette]]) mode, and a 640×480 mode only in monochrome due to 64k video memory, compared to the 256k memory of VGA.<ref name="Mueller92"/>
|Introduced by IBM on [[Industry Standard Architecture|ISA]]-based [[IBM Personal System/2|PS/2]] models in 1987, with reduced cost compared to [[VGA]]. MCGA had a {{resx|320|200}} 256-colour (from a 262,144 colour [[Palette (computing)|palette]]) mode, and a {{resx|640|480}} mode only in monochrome due to 64k video memory, compared to the 256k memory of VGA.<ref name="Mueller92"/>
|640×480 (307k),<br>320×200 (64k)
|{{resx|640|480}} (307k),<br />{{resx|320|200}} (64k)
|640
|640
|480 <!------------------------------- 480 ------------------------------->
|480 <!------------------------------- 480 ------------------------------->
|307,200
|307,200
|4:3 (square pixels)<br>16:10 (effectively 4:3)
|4:3 (square pixels)<br />16:10 (effectively 4:3)
|8&nbsp;bpp<br>1&nbsp;bpp
|8&nbsp;bpp<br />1&nbsp;bpp


|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
![[Video Graphics Array|VGA]]
![[Video Graphics Array|VGA]]
|Video Graphics Array
|Video Graphics Array
|Introduced on [[Micro Channel architecture|MCA]]-based PS/2 models in 1987, it replaced the digital TTL signaling of EGA and earlier standards with analog [[RGBHV]] signaling, using the synonymous [[VGA connector]]. As with EGA, the VGA standard actually encompasses a set of different resolutions; 640×480 is sometimes referred to as "VGA resolution" today, however as per the original standard this mode actually only supports 16 colours (4&nbsp;bpp) at 60 Hz. Other common display modes also defined as VGA include [[Mode 13h|320×200 at 256 colours]] (8&nbsp;bpp) (standard VGA resolution for DOS games that stems from halving the pixel rate of 640×400, but doubling color depth) and a text mode with 720×400 pixels; these modes run at 70 Hz and use non-square pixels, so 4:3 aspect correction is required for correct display.
|Introduced on [[Micro Channel architecture|MCA]]-based PS/2 models in 1987, it replaced the digital TTL signaling of EGA and earlier standards with analog [[RGBHV]] signaling, using the synonymous [[VGA connector]]. As with EGA, the VGA standard actually encompasses a set of different resolutions; {{resx|640|480}} is sometimes referred to as "VGA resolution" today, however as per the original standard this mode actually only supports 16 colours (4&nbsp;bpp) at 60 Hz. Other common display modes also defined as VGA include [[Mode 13h|{{resx|320|200}} at 256 colours]] (8&nbsp;bpp) (standard VGA resolution for DOS games that stems from halving the pixel rate of {{resx|640|400}}, but doubling color depth) and a text mode with {{resx|720|400}} pixels; these modes run at 70 Hz and use non-square pixels, so 4:3 aspect correction is required for correct display.


Furthermore, VGA displays and adapters are generally capable of [[Mode X]] graphics, an undocumented mode to allow increased non-standard resolutions, most commonly 320×240 (with 8&nbsp;bpp and square pixels) at 60 Hz.<ref name="Mueller92"/> VGA, like the majority of the following standards, was capable of displaying most standard modes featured by IBM-compatible PCs—CGA, EGA, MDA and MCGA—but typically not Hercules or PGA/PGC.
Furthermore, VGA displays and adapters are generally capable of [[Mode X]] graphics, an undocumented mode to allow increased non-standard resolutions, most commonly {{resx|320|240}} (with 8&nbsp;bpp and square pixels) at 60 Hz.<ref name="Mueller92"/> VGA, like the majority of the following standards, was capable of displaying most standard modes featured by IBM-compatible PCs—CGA, EGA, MDA and MCGA—but typically not Hercules or PGA/PGC.
|640×480 (307k) (hi-res graphics and LCD text)<br>720×400 (CRT text; 288k equivalent)<br>320×200 (64k), 320×240 (75k)
|{{resx|640|480}} (307k) (hi-res graphics and LCD text)<br />{{resx|720|400}} (CRT text; 288k equivalent)<br />{{resx|320|200}} (64k), {{resx|320|240}} (75k)
|640
|640
|480 <!------------------------------- 480 ------------------------------->
|480 <!------------------------------- 480 ------------------------------->
|307,200
|307,200
|4:3<br>9:5 (non-square [[Pixel aspect ratio|PAR]] 4:3)<br>16:10/8:5 (non-square [[Pixel aspect ratio|PAR]] 4:3)
|4:3<br />9:5 (non-square [[Pixel aspect ratio|PAR]] 4:3)<br />16:10/8:5 (non-square [[Pixel aspect ratio|PAR]] 4:3)
|4&nbsp;bpp<br>4&nbsp;bpp<br>8&nbsp;bpp
|4&nbsp;bpp<br />4&nbsp;bpp<br />8&nbsp;bpp


|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
Line 257: Line 257:
|Full-broadcast resolution video monitor or television
|Full-broadcast resolution video monitor or television
|[[Amiga]], [[Acorn Archimedes]], [[Atari Falcon]], and others. They used [[NTSC]] or [[PAL]]-compliant televisions and monochrome, composite video or RGB-component monitors. The interlaced (''i'' or ''I'') mode produced visible flickering of finer details, eventually fixable by use of scan doubler devices and VGA monitors.
|[[Amiga]], [[Acorn Archimedes]], [[Atari Falcon]], and others. They used [[NTSC]] or [[PAL]]-compliant televisions and monochrome, composite video or RGB-component monitors. The interlaced (''i'' or ''I'') mode produced visible flickering of finer details, eventually fixable by use of scan doubler devices and VGA monitors.
|720×480i/576i maximum. Typically 640×400i/512i or 640×200/256 NI, and 320×200/256 NI for games.
|{{resx|720|480}}i/576i maximum. Typically {{resx|640|400}}i/512i or {{resx|640|200}}/256 NI, and {{resx|320|200}}/256 NI for games.
|720
|720
|576 <!------------------------------- 576 ------------------------------->
|576 <!------------------------------- 576 ------------------------------->
Line 267: Line 267:
![[Super Video Graphics Array|SVGA]]
![[Super Video Graphics Array|SVGA]]
|Super Video Graphics Array
|Super Video Graphics Array
|An extension to VGA defined by [[VESA]] for IBM PC-compatible computers in 1989 meant to take advantage of video cards that exceeded the minimum 256&nbsp;kB defined in the VGA standard. For instance, one of the early supported modes was 800×600 in 16 colours at a slightly lower 56&nbsp;Hz refresh rate, leading to 800×600 sometimes being referred to as "SVGA resolution" today.
|An extension to VGA defined by [[VESA]] for IBM PC-compatible computers in 1989 meant to take advantage of video cards that exceeded the minimum 256&nbsp;kB defined in the VGA standard. For instance, one of the early supported modes was {{resx|800|600}} in 16 colours at a slightly lower 56&nbsp;Hz refresh rate, leading to {{resx|800|600}} sometimes being referred to as "SVGA resolution" today.


Over the course of the early-to-mid-1990s, "SVGA" became a quasi-standard term in PC games, typically referring to a 640×480 resolution using 256 colours (8&nbsp;bpp) at 60 Hz refresh rate. Many other higher and lower modes were standardized in the [[VESA BIOS Extensions]], leading to the establishment of "SVGA" and "VESA" as catch-all terms encompassing output modes that surpassed the original VGA specifications.
Over the course of the early-to-mid-1990s, "SVGA" became a quasi-standard term in PC games, typically referring to a {{resx|640|480}} resolution using 256 colours (8&nbsp;bpp) at 60 Hz refresh rate. Many other higher and lower modes were standardized in the [[VESA BIOS Extensions]], leading to the establishment of "SVGA" and "VESA" as catch-all terms encompassing output modes that surpassed the original VGA specifications.
|800×600 (480k)<br>640×480 (307k)
|{{resx|800|600}} (480k)<br />{{resx|640|480}} (307k)
|800
|800
|600 <!------------------------------- 600 ------------------------------->
|600 <!------------------------------- 600 ------------------------------->
|480,000
|480,000
|4:3
|4:3
|4&nbsp;bpp<br>8&nbsp;bpp
|4&nbsp;bpp<br />8&nbsp;bpp


|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
![[Mac (computer)|Mac]] Colour
![[Mac (computer)|Mac]] Colour
|Apple Mac II and later models
|Apple Mac II and later models
|The second-generation Macintosh, launched in 1987, came with colour (and greyscale) capability as standard, at two levels, depending on monitor size—512×384 (1/4 of the later XGA standard) on a 12" (4:3) colour or greyscale (monochrome) monitor; 640×480 with a larger (13" or 14") high-resolution monitor (superficially similar to VGA, but at a higher 67&nbsp;Hz refresh rate)—with 8-bit colour/256 grey shades at the lower resolution, and either 4-bit or 8-bit colour (16/256 grey) in high resolution depending on installed memory (256 or 512&nbsp;kB), all out of a full 24-bit master palette. The result was equivalent to VGA or even PGC—but with a wide palette—at a point simultaneous with the IBM launch of VGA.
|The second-generation Macintosh, launched in 1987, came with colour (and greyscale) capability as standard, at two levels, depending on monitor size—{{resx|512|384}} ({{Frac|1|4}} of the later XGA standard) on a 12" (4:3) colour or greyscale (monochrome) monitor; {{resx|640|480}} with a larger (13" or 14") high-resolution monitor (superficially similar to VGA, but at a higher 67&nbsp;Hz refresh rate)—with 8-bit colour/256 grey shades at the lower resolution, and either 4-bit or 8-bit colour (16/256 grey) in high resolution depending on installed memory (256 or 512&nbsp;kB), all out of a full 24-bit master palette. The result was equivalent to VGA or even PGC—but with a wide palette—at a point simultaneous with the IBM launch of VGA.


Later, larger monitors (15" and 16") allowed use of an SVGA-like binary-half-megapixel 832×624 resolution (at 75&nbsp;Hz) that was eventually used as the default setting for the original, late-1990s iMac. Even larger 17" and 19" monitors could attain higher resolutions still, when connected to a suitably capable computer, but apart from the 1152×870 "XGA+" mode discussed further below, Mac resolutions beyond 832×624 tended to fall into line with PC standards, using what were essentially rebadged PC monitors with a different cable connection. Mac models after the II (Power Mac, Quadra, etc.) also allowed at first 16-bit High Colour (65,536, or "Thousands of" colours), and then 24-bit True Colour (16.7M, or "Millions of" colours), but much like PC standards beyond XGA, the increase in colour depth past 8&nbsp;bpp was not strictly tied to changing resolution standards.
Later, larger monitors (15" and 16") allowed use of an SVGA-like binary-half-megapixel {{resx|832|624}} resolution (at 75&nbsp;Hz) that was eventually used as the default setting for the original, late-1990s iMac. Even larger 17" and 19" monitors could attain higher resolutions still, when connected to a suitably capable computer, but apart from the {{resx|1152|870}} XGA+ mode discussed further below, Mac resolutions beyond {{resx|832|624}} tended to fall into line with PC standards, using what were essentially rebadged PC monitors with a different cable connection. Mac models after the II (Power Mac, Quadra, etc.) also allowed at first 16-bit High Colour (65,536, or "Thousands of" colours), and then 24-bit True Colour (16.7M, or "Millions of" colours), but much like PC standards beyond XGA, the increase in colour depth past 8&nbsp;bpp was not strictly tied to changing resolution standards.
|832×624 (519k), 640×480 (307k), 512×384 (197k)
|{{resx|832|624}} (519k), {{resx|640|480}} (307k), {{resx|512|384}} (197k)
|832
|832
|624 <!------------------------------- 624 ------------------------------->
|624 <!------------------------------- 624 ------------------------------->
Line 294: Line 294:
|High Definition (720p)
|High Definition (720p)
|This display [[Aspect ratio (image)|aspect ratio]] is among the most common in recent{{When|date=February 2018}} notebook computers and desktop monitors.{{cn|date=February 2018}}
|This display [[Aspect ratio (image)|aspect ratio]] is among the most common in recent{{When|date=February 2018}} notebook computers and desktop monitors.{{cn|date=February 2018}}
|1280×720 (921k)
|{{resx|1280|720}} (921k)
|1280
|1280
|720 <!------------------------------- 720 ------------------------------->
|720 <!------------------------------- 720 ------------------------------->
Line 305: Line 305:
![[8514 (display standard)|8514]]
![[8514 (display standard)|8514]]
|
|
|Precursor to XGA and released shortly after VGA in 1987. 8514/A cards displayed interlaced video at 43.5&nbsp;Hz in a 1024×768 resolution, and at 640×480, 60&nbsp;Hz non-interlaced, both with up to 256 colours.<ref name="Mueller92"/>
|Precursor to XGA and released shortly after VGA in 1987. 8514/A cards displayed interlaced video at 43.5&nbsp;Hz in a {{resx|1024|768}} resolution, and at {{resx|640|480}}, 60&nbsp;Hz non-interlaced, both with up to 256 colours.<ref name="Mueller92"/>


The high-resolution mode introduced by 8514/A became a ''de facto'' general standard in a succession of computing and digital-media fields for more than two decades, arguably more so than SVGA, with successive IBM and clone videocards and CRT monitors (a multisync monitor's grade being broadly determinable by whether it could display 1024×768 at all, or show it interlaced, non-interlaced, or "flicker-free"), LCD panels (the standard resolution for 14" and 15" 4:3 desktop monitors, and a whole generation of 11–15" laptops), early plasma and [[HD ready]] LCD televisions (albeit at a stretched 16:9 aspect ratio, showing down-scaled material), professional video projectors, and most recently, tablet computers.
The high-resolution mode introduced by 8514/A became a de facto general standard in a succession of computing and digital-media fields for more than two decades, arguably more so than SVGA, with successive IBM and clone video cards and CRT monitors (a multisync monitor's grade being broadly determinable by whether it could display {{resx|1024|768}} at all, or show it interlaced, non-interlaced, or "flicker-free"), LCD panels (the standard resolution for 14" and 15" 4:3 desktop monitors, and a whole generation of 11–15" laptops), early plasma and [[HD ready]] LCD televisions (albeit at a stretched 16:9 aspect ratio, showing down-scaled material), professional video projectors, and most recently, tablet computers.
|1024×768 (786k), 640×480 (307k)
|{{resx|1024|768}} (786k), {{resx|640|480}} (307k)
|1024
|1024
|768 <!------------------------------- 768 ------------------------------->
|768 <!------------------------------- 768 ------------------------------->
Line 318: Line 318:
![[XGA]]
![[XGA]]
|Extended Graphics Array
|Extended Graphics Array
|An IBM display standard introduced in 1990. XGA built on 8514/A's existing 1024×768 mode and added support for "high colour" (65,536 colours, 16&nbsp;bpp) at 640×480. The second revision ("XGA-2") was a more thorough upgrade, offering higher refresh rates (75&nbsp;Hz and up, non-interlaced, up to at least 1024×768), improved performance, and a fully programmable display engine capable of almost any resolution within its physical limits. For example, 1280×1024 (5:4) or 1360×1024 (≈4:3) in 16 colours at 60&nbsp;Hz, 1056×400 [14h] Text Mode (132×50 characters); 800×600 in 256 or 64k colours; and even as high as 1600×1200 (at a reduced 50&nbsp;Hz scan rate) with a high-quality multisync monitor (or an otherwise non-standard 960×720 at 60&nbsp;Hz on a lower-end one capable of high refresh rates at 800×600, but only interlaced mode at 1024×768).<ref name="Mueller92"/> However, the extended modes required custom drivers, and so only the basic options (1024×768×8 <abbr title="Interlaced">I</abbr>, 640×480×16 <abbr title="Non-Interlaced">NI</abbr>, high-res text) were commonly used outside Windows and other hardware-abstracting graphical environments.
|An IBM display standard introduced in 1990. XGA built on 8514/A's existing {{resx|1024|768}} mode and added support for "high colour" (65,536 colours, 16&nbsp;bpp) at {{resx|640|480}}. The second revision ("XGA-2") was a more thorough upgrade, offering higher refresh rates (75&nbsp;Hz and up, non-interlaced, up to at least {{resx|1024|768}}), improved performance, and a fully programmable display engine capable of almost any resolution within its physical limits. For example, {{resx|1280|1024}} (5:4) or {{resx|1360|1024}} (≈4:3) in 16 colours at 60&nbsp;Hz, {{resx|1056|400}} [14h] Text Mode ({{resx|132|50}} characters); {{resx|800|600}} in 256 or 64k colours; and even as high as {{resx|1600|1200}} (at a reduced 50&nbsp;Hz scan rate) with a high-quality multisync monitor (or an otherwise non-standard {{resx|960|720}} at 60&nbsp;Hz on a lower-end one capable of high refresh rates at {{resx|800|600}}, but only interlaced mode at {{resx|1024|768}}).<ref name="Mueller92"/> However, the extended modes required custom drivers, and so only the basic options (1024×768×8 <abbr title="Interlaced">I</abbr>, 640×480×16 <abbr title="Non-Interlaced">NI</abbr>, high-res text) were commonly used outside Windows and other hardware-abstracting graphical environments.
|1024×768 (786k)<br>640×480 (307k), 1056×400 (text, 422k equivalent)
|{{resx|1024|768}} (786k)<br />{{resx|640|480}} (307k), {{resx|1056|400}} (text, 422k equivalent)
|1024
|1024
|768 <!------------------------------- 768 ------------------------------->
|768 <!------------------------------- 768 ------------------------------->
|786,432
|786,432
|4:3<br>4:3, 66:25 (effectively 4:3)
|4:3<br />4:3, 66:25 (effectively 4:3)
|8&nbsp;bpp<br>16&nbsp;bpp
|8&nbsp;bpp<br />16&nbsp;bpp


|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
![[Wide XGA|WXGA]]
![[Wide XGA|WXGA]]
|Widescreen Extended Graphics Array
|Widescreen Extended Graphics Array
|A wide version of the XGA format. This display [[Aspect ratio (image)|aspect ratio]] was common in widescreen notebook computers until ''ca.'' 2010.
|A wide version of the XGA format. This display [[Aspect ratio (image)|aspect ratio]] was common in widescreen notebook computers until c. 2010.
|1366×768&nbsp;(1,049k)<ref name="vesa TV">{{cite web |url=http://www.vesa.org/Public/Panel%20Standards/TVpnlV1.pdf |title=TV Panels Standard |publisher=VESA |date=10 March 2006 |access-date=2013-05-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081209101345/http://www.vesa.org/Public/Panel%20Standards/TVpnlV1.pdf |archive-date=2008-12-09}}</ref>,<br>1360×768&nbsp;(1,044k),<br>1280×800 (1,024k)<br>
|{{resx|1366|768}} (1,049k)<ref name="vesa TV">{{cite web |url=http://www.vesa.org/Public/Panel%20Standards/TVpnlV1.pdf |title=TV Panels Standard |publisher=VESA |date=10 March 2006 |access-date=2013-05-22 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081209101345/http://www.vesa.org/Public/Panel%20Standards/TVpnlV1.pdf |archive-date=2008-12-09}}</ref>,<br />{{resx|1360|768}} (1,044k),<br />{{resx|1280|800}} (1,024k)<br />
|1366
|1366
|768 <!------------------------------- 768 ------------------------------->
|768 <!------------------------------- 768 ------------------------------->
|1,049,088
|1,049,088
|≈16:9 (1366×768 and 1360x768), 16:10 (1280x800)
|≈16:9 ({{resx|1366|768}} and {{resx|1360|768}}), 16:10 ({{resx|1280|800}})
|24&nbsp;bpp
|24&nbsp;bpp


Line 340: Line 340:
![[XGA+]]
![[XGA+]]
|Extended Graphics Array Plus
|Extended Graphics Array Plus
|Although not an official name, this term is now used to refer to 1152×864, which is the largest 4:3 array yielding less than a binary megapixel (2^20, 1048576 pixels, 1048 decimal kilopixels), thus allowing the greatest "normal" resolution at common colour depths with a standard amount of video memory (128&nbsp;kB, 512&nbsp;kB, 1&nbsp;MB, 2&nbsp;MB, etc.). Variants of this were used by [[NeXT]] (at 1120x832), Apple (at 1152×870), and [[Sun Microsystems]] (at 1152×900) for 17" to 21" CRT displays. {{citation needed|reason=A citation is needed that these are also called XGA+|date=May 2023}}.
|Although not an official name, this term is now used to refer to {{resx|1152|864}}, which is the largest 4:3 array yielding less than a binary megapixel (2^20, 1048576 pixels, 1048 decimal kilopixels), thus allowing the greatest "normal" resolution at common colour depths with a standard amount of video memory (128&nbsp;kB, 512&nbsp;kB, 1&nbsp;MB, 2&nbsp;MB, etc.). Variants of this were used by [[NeXT]] (at {{resx|1120|832}}), Apple (at {{resx|1152|870}}), and [[Sun Microsystems]] (at {{resx|1152|900}}) for 17" to 21" CRT displays.{{Citation needed|reason=A citation is needed that these are also called XGA+|date=May 2023}}.
|1152×864 (995k)<br> 1120×832 (932k)<br>1152×870 (1,002k)<br>1152×900 (1,037k)
|{{resx|1152|864}} (995k)<br /> {{resx|1120|832}} (932k)<br />{{resx|1152|870}} (1,002k)<br />{{resx|1152|900}} (1,037k)
|1152
|1152
|864 <!------------------------------- 864 ------------------------------->
|864 <!------------------------------- 864 ------------------------------->
|995,328
|995,328
|4:3
|4:3
|8&nbsp;bpp<br>16&nbsp;bpp
|8&nbsp;bpp<br />16&nbsp;bpp


|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
![[WXGA+]] ([[WSXGA]])
![[WXGA+]] ([[WSXGA]])
|Widescreen Extended Graphics Array PLUS
|Widescreen Extended Graphics Array PLUS
|An enhanced version of the WXGA format. This display [[Aspect ratio (image)|aspect ratio]] was common in widescreen notebook computers, and many 19" widescreen LCD monitors until ''ca.'' 2010.
|An enhanced version of the WXGA format. This display [[Aspect ratio (image)|aspect ratio]] was common in widescreen notebook computers, and many 19" widescreen LCD monitors until c. 2010.
|1440×900 (1,296k)
|{{resx|1440|900}} (1,296k)
|1440
|1440
|900 <!------------------------------- 900 ------------------------------->
|900 <!------------------------------- 900 ------------------------------->
Line 363: Line 363:
|High Definition Plus (900p)
|High Definition Plus (900p)
|
|
|1600×900 (1,440k)
|{{resx|1600|900}} (1,440k)
|1600
|1600
|900 <!------------------------------- 900 ------------------------------->
|900 <!------------------------------- 900 ------------------------------->
Line 374: Line 374:
|Atari TT (etc.) Monochrome, proprietary standard
|Atari TT (etc.) Monochrome, proprietary standard
|[[Atari TT]] line. High resolution monochrome mode using a custom non-interlaced ECL monitor, allowing a higher, "flicker free" 70&nbsp;Hz refresh rate.
|[[Atari TT]] line. High resolution monochrome mode using a custom non-interlaced ECL monitor, allowing a higher, "flicker free" 70&nbsp;Hz refresh rate.
|1280×960 (1229k)
|{{resx|1280|960}} (1229k)
|1280
|1280
|960 <!------------------------------- 960 ------------------------------->
|960 <!------------------------------- 960 ------------------------------->
Line 386: Line 386:
|A widely used ''[[de facto]]'' standard, introduced with XGA-2 and other early "multiscan" graphics cards and monitors, with an unusual [[Aspect ratio (image)|aspect ratio]] of 5:4 (1.25:1) instead of the more common 4:3 (1.{{overline|3}}:1), meaning that even 4:3 pictures and video will appear letterboxed on the narrower 5:4 screens. This is generally the native resolution—with, therefore, square pixels—of standard 17" and 19" LCD monitors. It was often a recommended resolution for 17" and 19" CRTs also, though as they were usually produced in a 4:3 aspect ratio, it either gave non-square pixels or required adjustment to show small vertical borders at each side of the image. Allows 24-bit colour in 4&nbsp;MB of graphics memory, or 4-bit colour in 640&nbsp;kB.
|A widely used ''[[de facto]]'' standard, introduced with XGA-2 and other early "multiscan" graphics cards and monitors, with an unusual [[Aspect ratio (image)|aspect ratio]] of 5:4 (1.25:1) instead of the more common 4:3 (1.{{overline|3}}:1), meaning that even 4:3 pictures and video will appear letterboxed on the narrower 5:4 screens. This is generally the native resolution—with, therefore, square pixels—of standard 17" and 19" LCD monitors. It was often a recommended resolution for 17" and 19" CRTs also, though as they were usually produced in a 4:3 aspect ratio, it either gave non-square pixels or required adjustment to show small vertical borders at each side of the image. Allows 24-bit colour in 4&nbsp;MB of graphics memory, or 4-bit colour in 640&nbsp;kB.
* Some manufacturers,{{Who|date=December 2011}} noting that the ''de facto'' industry standard was VGA (Video Graphics Array), termed this the E'''x'''tended Video Graphics Array, or XVGA.
* Some manufacturers,{{Who|date=December 2011}} noting that the ''de facto'' industry standard was VGA (Video Graphics Array), termed this the E'''x'''tended Video Graphics Array, or XVGA.
|1280×1024 (1,310k)
|{{resx|1280|1024}} (1,310k)
|1280
|1280
|1024 <!------------------------------- 1024 ------------------------------->
|1024 <!------------------------------- 1024 ------------------------------->
Line 397: Line 397:
|Super Extended Graphics Array PLUS
|Super Extended Graphics Array PLUS
| Used on 14" and 15" notebook LCD screens and a few smaller screens, until the eventual{{when?|date=May 2023}} market-wide phasing-out of 4:3 aspect displays.
| Used on 14" and 15" notebook LCD screens and a few smaller screens, until the eventual{{when?|date=May 2023}} market-wide phasing-out of 4:3 aspect displays.
|1400×1050 (1,470k)
|{{resx|1400|1050}} (1,470k)
|1400
|1400
|1050 <!------------------------------- 1050 ------------------------------->
|1050 <!------------------------------- 1050 ------------------------------->
Line 407: Line 407:
![[WSXGA+]]
![[WSXGA+]]
|Widescreen Super Extended Graphics Array Plus
|Widescreen Super Extended Graphics Array Plus
|A wide version of the SXGA+ format, the native resolution for many 22" widescreen LCD monitors, also used in larger, wide-screen notebook computers until ''ca.'' 2010.
|A wide version of the SXGA+ format, the native resolution for many 22" widescreen LCD monitors, also used in larger, wide-screen notebook computers until c. 2010.
|1680×1050 (1,764k)
|{{resx|1680|1050}} (1,764k)
|1680
|1680
|1050 <!------------------------------- 1050 ------------------------------->
|1050 <!------------------------------- 1050 ------------------------------->
Line 419: Line 419:
|Full High Definition (1080p)
|Full High Definition (1080p)
|This display aspect ratio is the native resolution for many 24" widescreen LCD monitors, and is expected to also become a standard resolution for smaller-to-medium-sized wide-aspect tablet computers in the near future (as of 2012).
|This display aspect ratio is the native resolution for many 24" widescreen LCD monitors, and is expected to also become a standard resolution for smaller-to-medium-sized wide-aspect tablet computers in the near future (as of 2012).
|1920×1080 (2,073k)
|{{resx|1920|1080}} (2,073k)
|1920
|1920
|1080 <!------------------------------- 1080 ------------------------------->
|1080 <!------------------------------- 1080 ------------------------------->
Line 430: Line 430:
|Digital Cinema Initiatives 2K
|Digital Cinema Initiatives 2K
|Baseline standard for digital cinema capture, post production and presentation.
|Baseline standard for digital cinema capture, post production and presentation.
|2048×1080 (2,212k)
|{{resx|2048|1080}} (2,212k)
|2048
|2048
|1080 <!------------------------------- 1080 ------------------------------->
|1080 <!------------------------------- 1080 ------------------------------->
Line 442: Line 442:
|UNNAMED
|UNNAMED
|Sometimes casually referred to as "1080p ultrawide". Referred to occasionally as "UW-UXGA".
|Sometimes casually referred to as "1080p ultrawide". Referred to occasionally as "UW-UXGA".
|2560×1080 (2,765k)
|{{resx|2560|1080}} (2,765k)
|2560
|2560
|1080 <!------------------------------- 1080 ------------------------------->
|1080 <!------------------------------- 1080 ------------------------------->
Line 454: Line 454:
|Quad Wide Extended Graphics Array
|Quad Wide Extended Graphics Array
|Samsung has a QWXGA resolution 23" LCD monitor, the ''2342BWX''.
|Samsung has a QWXGA resolution 23" LCD monitor, the ''2342BWX''.
|2048×1152 (2,359k)
|{{resx|2048|1152}} (2,359k)
|2048
|2048
|1152 <!------------------------------- 1152 ------------------------------->
|1152 <!------------------------------- 1152 ------------------------------->
Line 465: Line 465:
|Ultra Extended Graphics Array
|Ultra Extended Graphics Array
|A ''[[de facto]]'' high-resolution standard. This is the native resolution for many 20" LCD monitors, and was a recommended mode for some high-end 21" CRTs.
|A ''[[de facto]]'' high-resolution standard. This is the native resolution for many 20" LCD monitors, and was a recommended mode for some high-end 21" CRTs.
|1600×1200 (1,920k)
|{{resx|1600|1200}} (1,920k)
|1600
|1600
|1200 <!------------------------------- 1200 ------------------------------->
|1200 <!------------------------------- 1200 ------------------------------->
Line 475: Line 475:
![[WUXGA]]
![[WUXGA]]
|Widescreen Ultra Extended Graphics Array
|Widescreen Ultra Extended Graphics Array
|A wide version of the UXGA format. This display aspect ratio was popular on high-end 15" and 17" widescreen notebook computers, as well as on many 23–27" widescreen LCD monitors, until ''ca.'' 2010. It is also a popular resolution for home cinema projectors, besides<!--beyond?--> 1080p, in order to show non-widescreen material slightly taller than widescreen (and therefore also slightly wider than it might otherwise be), and is the highest resolution supported by single-link [[Digital Visual Interface|DVI]] at standard colour depth and scan rate (i.e., no less than 24&nbsp;bpp and 60&nbsp;Hz non-interlaced)
|A wide version of the UXGA format. This display aspect ratio was popular on high-end 15" and 17" widescreen notebook computers, as well as on many 23–27" widescreen LCD monitors, until c. 2010. It is also a popular resolution for home cinema projectors, besides<!--beyond?--> 1080p, in order to show non-widescreen material slightly taller than widescreen (and therefore also slightly wider than it might otherwise be), and is the highest resolution supported by single-link [[Digital Visual Interface|DVI]] at standard colour depth and scan rate (i.e., no less than 24&nbsp;bpp and 60&nbsp;Hz non-interlaced)
|1920×1200 (2,304k)
|{{resx|1920|1200}} (2,304k)
|1920
|1920
|1200 <!------------------------------- 1200 ------------------------------->
|1200 <!------------------------------- 1200 ------------------------------->
Line 487: Line 487:
|UNNAMED
|UNNAMED
|Used on [[Microsoft Surface 3]].
|Used on [[Microsoft Surface 3]].
|1920×1280 (2,458k)
|{{resx|1920|1280}} (2,458k)
|1920
|1920
|1280 <!------------------------------- 1280 ------------------------------->
|1280 <!------------------------------- 1280 ------------------------------->
Line 498: Line 498:
|UNNAMED
|UNNAMED
|4:3 superset of 1080p, common on high-resolution CRTs.
|4:3 superset of 1080p, common on high-resolution CRTs.
|1920×1440 (2,765k)
|{{resx|1920|1440}} (2,765k)
|1920
|1920
|1440 <!------------------------------- 1440 ------------------------------->
|1440 <!------------------------------- 1440 ------------------------------->
Line 509: Line 509:
|UNNAMED
|UNNAMED
|Used on [[Microsoft Surface Pro 3]].
|Used on [[Microsoft Surface Pro 3]].
|2160×1440 (3,110k)
|{{resx|2160|1440}} (3,110k)
|2160
|2160
|1440 <!------------------------------- 1440 ------------------------------->
|1440 <!------------------------------- 1440 ------------------------------->
Line 517: Line 517:


|- style="vertical-align:top;"
|- style="vertical-align:top;"
![[Graphics display resolution#QHD (2560x1440)|QHD]]
![[Graphics display resolution#QHD (2560×1440)|QHD]]
|Quad High Definition
|Quad High Definition
|The native resolution for many higher end 27" widescreen [[IPS panel]]s and smartphones (from the mid-2010s onward); often referred to as "WQHD"
|The native resolution for many higher end 27" widescreen [[IPS panel]]s and smartphones (from the mid-2010s onward); often referred to as "WQHD"
|2560×1440 (3,686k)
|{{resx|2560|1440}} (3,686k)
|2560
|2560
|1440 <!------------------------------- 1440 ------------------------------->
|1440 <!------------------------------- 1440 ------------------------------->
Line 531: Line 531:
|UNNAMED
|UNNAMED
|Used on [[LG G6]], [[LG V30]] and [[Pixel 2 XL]] smartphones.
|Used on [[LG G6]], [[LG V30]] and [[Pixel 2 XL]] smartphones.
|2880×1440 (4,147k)
|{{resx|2880|1440}} (4,147k)
|2880
|2880
|1440 <!------------------------------- 1440 ------------------------------->
|1440 <!------------------------------- 1440 ------------------------------->
Line 542: Line 542:
|UNNAMED
|UNNAMED
|Used on [[Samsung]] [[Samsung Galaxy S8|Galaxy S8]], [[Samsung Galaxy Note 8|Galaxy Note 8]], and [[Samsung Galaxy S9|Galaxy S9]] smartphones.
|Used on [[Samsung]] [[Samsung Galaxy S8|Galaxy S8]], [[Samsung Galaxy Note 8|Galaxy Note 8]], and [[Samsung Galaxy S9|Galaxy S9]] smartphones.
|2960×1440 (4,262k)
|{{resx|2960|1440}} (4,262k)
|2960
|2960
|1440 <!------------------------------- 1440 ------------------------------->
|1440 <!------------------------------- 1440 ------------------------------->
Line 553: Line 553:
|Ultra-Wide Quad HD
|Ultra-Wide Quad HD
|Sometimes casually referred to as "1440p ultrawide".
|Sometimes casually referred to as "1440p ultrawide".
|3440×1440 (4,954k)
|{{resx|3440|1440}} (4,954k)
|3440
|3440
|1440 <!------------------------------- 1440 ------------------------------->
|1440 <!------------------------------- 1440 ------------------------------->
Line 565: Line 565:
|Quad Extended Graphics Array
|Quad Extended Graphics Array
|This is the highest resolution that generally can be displayed on analog computer monitors (most CRTs), and the highest resolution that most analogue video cards and other display transmission hardware (cables, switch boxes, signal boosters) are rated for (at 60&nbsp;Hz refresh). 24-bit colour requires 9&nbsp;MB of video memory (and transmission bandwidth) for a single frame. It is also the native resolution of medium-to-large latest-generation (2012) standard-aspect tablet computers.
|This is the highest resolution that generally can be displayed on analog computer monitors (most CRTs), and the highest resolution that most analogue video cards and other display transmission hardware (cables, switch boxes, signal boosters) are rated for (at 60&nbsp;Hz refresh). 24-bit colour requires 9&nbsp;MB of video memory (and transmission bandwidth) for a single frame. It is also the native resolution of medium-to-large latest-generation (2012) standard-aspect tablet computers.
|2048×1536 (3,146k)
|{{resx|2048|1536}} (3,146k)
|2048
|2048
|1536 <!------------------------------- 1536 ------------------------------->
|1536 <!------------------------------- 1536 ------------------------------->
Line 576: Line 576:
|Widescreen Quad Extended Graphics Array
|Widescreen Quad Extended Graphics Array
|A version of the XGA format, the native resolution for many 30" widescreen LCD monitors. Also, the highest resolution supported by dual-link [[Digital Video Interface|DVI]] at a standard colour depth and non-interlaced refresh rate (i.e. at least 24&nbsp;bpp and 60&nbsp;Hz). Used on [[MacBook Pro with Retina display]] (13.3"). Requires 12&nbsp;MB of memory/bandwidth for a single frame.
|A version of the XGA format, the native resolution for many 30" widescreen LCD monitors. Also, the highest resolution supported by dual-link [[Digital Video Interface|DVI]] at a standard colour depth and non-interlaced refresh rate (i.e. at least 24&nbsp;bpp and 60&nbsp;Hz). Used on [[MacBook Pro with Retina display]] (13.3"). Requires 12&nbsp;MB of memory/bandwidth for a single frame.
|2560×1600 (4,096k)
|{{resx|2560|1600}} (4,096k)
|2560
|2560
|1600 <!------------------------------- 1600 ------------------------------->
|1600 <!------------------------------- 1600 ------------------------------->
Line 587: Line 587:
|Ultra-Wide 4K
|Ultra-Wide 4K
|Commonly used on Ultra HD Blu-ray discs.{{citation needed|date=May 2023}}
|Commonly used on Ultra HD Blu-ray discs.{{citation needed|date=May 2023}}
|3840×1600 (6,144k)
|{{resx|3840|1600}} (6,144k)
|3840
|3840
|1600 <!------------------------------- 1600 ------------------------------->
|1600 <!------------------------------- 1600 ------------------------------->
Line 597: Line 597:
!QWXGA+<ref>{{cite web |title=新型MacBook Pro Retinaってどうよ? 社内で聞いてみた |date=2012-06-24 |website=ASCII.jp×iPhone/Mac |publisher=Kadokawa Corporation |url=http://ascii.jp/elem/000/000/704/704443/ |language=Japanese}}</ref>
!QWXGA+<ref>{{cite web |title=新型MacBook Pro Retinaってどうよ? 社内で聞いてみた |date=2012-06-24 |website=ASCII.jp×iPhone/Mac |publisher=Kadokawa Corporation |url=http://ascii.jp/elem/000/000/704/704443/ |language=Japanese}}</ref>
|Quad Wide Extended Graphics Array Plus
|Quad Wide Extended Graphics Array Plus
|Used on [[MacBook Pro with Retina display]] (15.4"). Double the resolution of the previous 1440×900 standard in each dimension.
|Used on [[MacBook Pro with Retina display]] (15.4"). Double the resolution of the previous {{resx|1440|900}} standard in each dimension.
|2880×1800 (5,184k)
|{{resx|2880|1800}} (5,184k)
|2880
|2880
|1800 <!------------------------------- 1800 ------------------------------->
|1800 <!------------------------------- 1800 ------------------------------->
Line 609: Line 609:
|UNNAMED
|UNNAMED
|Used on [[Surface Pro 4|Microsoft Surface Pro 4]].
|Used on [[Surface Pro 4|Microsoft Surface Pro 4]].
|2736×1824 (4,991k)
|{{resx|2736|1824}} (4,991k)
|2736
|2736
|1824 <!------------------------------- 1824 ------------------------------->
|1824 <!------------------------------- 1824 ------------------------------->
Line 620: Line 620:
|UNNAMED
|UNNAMED
|Used on 14" Macbook Pro.
|Used on 14" Macbook Pro.
|3024×1964 (5,939k)
|{{resx|3024|1964}} (5,939k)
|3024
|3024
|1964 <!------------------------------- 1964 ------------------------------->
|1964 <!------------------------------- 1964 ------------------------------->
Line 631: Line 631:
|UNNAMED
|UNNAMED
|Used on [[Surface Book|Microsoft Surface Book]].
|Used on [[Surface Book|Microsoft Surface Book]].
|3000×2000 (6,000k)
|{{resx|3000|2000}} (6,000k)
|3000
|3000
|2000 <!------------------------------- 2000 ------------------------------->
|2000 <!------------------------------- 2000 ------------------------------->
Line 642: Line 642:
|Quad Super Extended Graphics Array
|Quad Super Extended Graphics Array
|Double the resolution of SXGA in each dimension.
|Double the resolution of SXGA in each dimension.
|2560×2048 (5,243k)
|{{resx|2560|2048}} (5,243k)
|2560
|2560
|2048 <!------------------------------- 2048 ------------------------------->
|2048 <!------------------------------- 2048 ------------------------------->
Line 653: Line 653:
|Wide Quad Super Extended Graphics Array
|Wide Quad Super Extended Graphics Array
|
|
|3200×2048 (6,554k)
|{{resx|3200|2048}} (6,554k)
|3200
|3200
|2048 <!------------------------------- 2048 ------------------------------->
|2048 <!------------------------------- 2048 ------------------------------->
Line 665: Line 665:
|Ultra High-Definition, or Quad Full High-Definition
|Ultra High-Definition, or Quad Full High-Definition
|Four times the resolution of 1080p. Requires a dual-link DVI, category 2 (high-speed) HDMI, [[DisplayPort]] or a single [[Thunderbolt (interface)|Thunderbolt]] link, and a reduced scan rate (up to 30&nbsp;Hz); a DisplayPort 1.2 connection can support this resolution at 60&nbsp;Hz, or 30&nbsp;Hz in stereoscopic 3D.
|Four times the resolution of 1080p. Requires a dual-link DVI, category 2 (high-speed) HDMI, [[DisplayPort]] or a single [[Thunderbolt (interface)|Thunderbolt]] link, and a reduced scan rate (up to 30&nbsp;Hz); a DisplayPort 1.2 connection can support this resolution at 60&nbsp;Hz, or 30&nbsp;Hz in stereoscopic 3D.
|3840×2160 (8,294k)
|{{resx|3840|2160}} (8,294k)
|3840
|3840
|2160 <!------------------------------- 2160 ------------------------------->
|2160 <!------------------------------- 2160 ------------------------------->
Line 676: Line 676:
|Digital Cinema Initiatives 4K
|Digital Cinema Initiatives 4K
|The current standard (2012) in digital cinema. Double Hres and Vres of DCI 2K.
|The current standard (2012) in digital cinema. Double Hres and Vres of DCI 2K.
|4096×2160 (8,847k)
|{{resx|4096|2160}} (8,847k)
|4096
|4096
|2160 <!------------------------------- 2160 ------------------------------->
|2160 <!------------------------------- 2160 ------------------------------->
Line 687: Line 687:
!UW5K
!UW5K
|Ultra-Wide 5K
|Ultra-Wide 5K
|Also referred to as WUHD in consumer displays. 21:9 aspect ratio version of UHD 4K, defined in CTA-861-G, or resulting from 3840x2160 with 4:3 pixel ratio in HDMI 2.0/2.1.  
|Also referred to as WUHD in consumer displays. 21:9 aspect ratio version of UHD 4K, defined in CTA-861-G, or resulting from {{resx|3840|2160}} with 4:3 pixel ratio in HDMI 2.0/2.1.  
|5120×2160 (11,059k)
|{{resx|5120|2160}} (11,059k)
|5120
|5120
|2160 <!------------------------------- 2160 ------------------------------->
|2160 <!------------------------------- 2160 ------------------------------->
Line 700: Line 700:
|UNNAMED
|UNNAMED
|Used on 16" Macbook Pro.
|Used on 16" Macbook Pro.
|3456×2234 (7,721k)
|{{resx|3456|2234}} (7,721k)
|3456
|3456
|2234 <!------------------------------- 2234 ------------------------------->
|2234 <!------------------------------- 2234 ------------------------------->
Line 711: Line 711:
|Quad Ultra Extended Graphics Array
|Quad Ultra Extended Graphics Array
|
|
|3200×2400 (7,680k)
|{{resx|3200|2400}} (7,680k)
|3200
|3200
|2400 <!------------------------------- 2400 ------------------------------->
|2400 <!------------------------------- 2400 ------------------------------->
Line 723: Line 723:
|The [[IBM T220/T221 LCD monitors]] supported this resolution, but they are discontinued and no longer available.
|The [[IBM T220/T221 LCD monitors]] supported this resolution, but they are discontinued and no longer available.
Also used for Dell laptops from 2019 onwards.  
Also used for Dell laptops from 2019 onwards.  
|3840×2400 (9,216k)
|{{resx|3840|2400}} (9,216k)
|3840
|3840
|2400 <!------------------------------- 2400 ------------------------------->
|2400 <!------------------------------- 2400 ------------------------------->
Line 733: Line 733:
!UHD 5K
!UHD 5K
|5K Ultra High-Definition
|5K Ultra High-Definition
|Often referred to as "5K" or "UHD+". Having exactly double the dimensions of WQHD's 2560×1440 (3686k), used on Apple's late-2014 27" [[iMac (Intel-based)#Slim Unibody iMac|iMac]] ''[[Retina Display|Retina 5K Display]]''
|Often referred to as "5K" or "UHD+". Having exactly double the dimensions of WQHD's {{resx|2560|1440}} (3686k), used on Apple's late-2014 27" [[iMac (Intel-based)#Slim Unibody iMac|iMac]] ''[[Retina Display|Retina 5K Display]]''
|5120×2880 (14,745k)
|{{resx|5120|2880}} (14,745k)
|5120
|5120
|2880 <!------------------------------- 2880 ------------------------------->
|2880 <!------------------------------- 2880 ------------------------------->
Line 745: Line 745:
|UNNAMED
|UNNAMED
|Used on [[Microsoft Surface Studio]].
|Used on [[Microsoft Surface Studio]].
|4500×3000 (13,500k)
|{{resx|4500|3000}} (13,500k)
|4500
|4500
|3000 <!------------------------------- 3000 ------------------------------->
|3000 <!------------------------------- 3000 ------------------------------->
Line 756: Line 756:
|Hex[adecatuple] Extended Graphics Array
|Hex[adecatuple] Extended Graphics Array
|
|
|4096×3072 (12,583k)
|{{resx|4096|3072}} (12,583k)
|4096
|4096
|3072 <!------------------------------- 3072 ------------------------------->
|3072 <!------------------------------- 3072 ------------------------------->
Line 767: Line 767:
|Wide Hex[adecatuple] Extended Graphics Array
|Wide Hex[adecatuple] Extended Graphics Array
|
|
|5120×3200 (16,384k)
|{{resx|5120|3200}} (16,384k)
|5120
|5120
|3200 <!------------------------------- 3200 ------------------------------->
|3200 <!------------------------------- 3200 ------------------------------->
Line 778: Line 778:
|Ultra-Wide 8K
|Ultra-Wide 8K
|
|
|7680×3200 (24,576k)
|{{resx|7680|3200}} (24,576k)
|7680
|7680
|3200 <!------------------------------- 3200 ------------------------------->
|3200 <!------------------------------- 3200 ------------------------------->
Line 789: Line 789:
|Hex[adecatuple] Super Extended Graphics Array
|Hex[adecatuple] Super Extended Graphics Array
|
|
|5120×4096 (20,972k)
|{{resx|5120|4096}} (20,972k)
|5120
|5120
|4096 <!------------------------------- 4096 ------------------------------->
|4096 <!------------------------------- 4096 ------------------------------->
Line 800: Line 800:
|Wide Hex[adecatuple] Super Extended Graphics Array
|Wide Hex[adecatuple] Super Extended Graphics Array
|
|
|6400×4096 (26,214k)
|{{resx|6400|4096}} (26,214k)
|6400
|6400
|4096 <!------------------------------- 4096 ------------------------------->
|4096 <!------------------------------- 4096 ------------------------------->
Line 812: Line 812:
|8K Ultra-high-definition (Super Hi-Vision)
|8K Ultra-high-definition (Super Hi-Vision)
|Consumer video format defined by CTA-861-G. Provides effectively "pixel-less" imagery even on extra-large displays.
|Consumer video format defined by CTA-861-G. Provides effectively "pixel-less" imagery even on extra-large displays.
|7680×4320 (33,177k)
|{{resx|7680|4320}} (33,177k)
|7680
|7680
|4320 <!------------------------------- 4320 ------------------------------->
|4320 <!------------------------------- 4320 ------------------------------->
Line 822: Line 822:
!UHD 10K
!UHD 10K
|
|
|21:9 aspect ratio version of UHD 8K, defined in CTA-861-G (VIC 210-217), or resulting from 7680x4320 with 4:3 pixel ratio in HDMI 2.1.
|21:9 aspect ratio version of UHD 8K, defined in CTA-861-G (VIC 210-217), or resulting from {{resx|7680|4320}} with 4:3 pixel ratio in HDMI 2.1.
|10240×4320 (44,236k)
|{{resx|10240|4320}} (44,236k)
|10240
|10240
|4320 <!------------------------------- 4320 ------------------------------->
|4320 <!------------------------------- 4320 ------------------------------->
Line 835: Line 835:
|Hex[adecatuple] Ultra Extended Graphics Array
|Hex[adecatuple] Ultra Extended Graphics Array
|
|
|6400×4800 (30,720k)
|{{resx|6400|4800}} (30,720k)
|6400
|6400
|4800 <!------------------------------- 4800 ------------------------------->
|4800 <!------------------------------- 4800 ------------------------------->
Line 846: Line 846:
|Wide Hex[adecatuple] Ultra Extended Graphics Array
|Wide Hex[adecatuple] Ultra Extended Graphics Array
|
|
|7680×4800 (36,864k)
|{{resx|7680|4800}} (36,864k)
|7680
|7680
|4800 <!------------------------------- 4800 ------------------------------->
|4800 <!------------------------------- 4800 ------------------------------->
Line 857: Line 857:
Although the common standard prefixes ''super'' and ''ultra'' do not indicate specific modifiers to base standard resolutions, several others do:
Although the common standard prefixes ''super'' and ''ultra'' do not indicate specific modifiers to base standard resolutions, several others do:
;Quarter (Q or q)
;Quarter (Q or q)
:A quarter of the base resolution. E.g. [[QVGA]], a term for a 320×240 resolution, half the width and height of VGA, hence the quarter total resolution. The "Q" prefix usually indicates "Quad" (4 times as many, not 1/4 times as many) in higher resolutions, and sometimes "q" is used instead of "Q" to specify ''quarter'' (by analogy with [[SI prefix]]es m/M{{citation needed|reason=previously included k/K which makes no sense as there is no K and k is kilo 10^3, additionally M is 10^6, while m is 10^-3, making it different to the use of Q and q|date=August 2012}}), but this usage is not consistent.<ref>{{ Citation
:A quarter of the base resolution. E.g. [[QVGA]], a term for a {{resx|320|240}} resolution, half the width and height of VGA, hence the quarter total resolution. The "Q" prefix usually indicates "Quad" (4 times as many, not 1/4 times as many) in higher resolutions, and sometimes "q" is used instead of "Q" to specify ''quarter'' (by analogy with [[SI prefix]]es m/M{{citation needed|reason=previously included k/K which makes no sense as there is no K and k is kilo 10^3, additionally M is 10^6, while m is 10^-3, making it different to the use of Q and q|date=August 2012}}), but this usage is not consistent.<ref>{{ Citation
  | title=Accurate Power Estimation of LCD Panels for Notebook Design of Low-Cost 2.2-inch qVGA LTPS TFT-LCD Panel
  | title=Accurate Power Estimation of LCD Panels for Notebook Design of Low-Cost 2.2-inch qVGA LTPS TFT-LCD Panel
  | first1=Min-Seok
  | first1=Min-Seok
Line 880: Line 880:
  }}</ref>
  }}</ref>
;Wide (W)
;Wide (W)
:The base resolution increased by increasing the width and keeping the height constant, for square or near-square pixels on a widescreen display, usually with an aspect ratio of either 16:9 (adding an extra 1/3rd width vs a standard 4:3 display) or 16:10 (adding an extra 1/5th). However, it is sometimes used to denote a resolution that would have roughly the same total pixel count as this, but in a different aspect and sharing neither the horizontal OR vertical resolution—typically for a 16:10 resolution which is narrower but taller than the 16:9 option, and therefore larger in both dimensions than the base standard (e.g., compare 1366×768 and 1280×800, both commonly labelled as "WXGA", vs the base 1024×768 "XGA").
:The base resolution increased by increasing the width and keeping the height constant, for square or near-square pixels on a widescreen display, usually with an aspect ratio of either 16:9 (adding an extra 1/3rd width vs a standard 4:3 display) or 16:10 (adding an extra 1/5th). However, it is sometimes used to denote a resolution that would have roughly the same total pixel count as this, but in a different aspect and sharing neither the horizontal OR vertical resolution—typically for a 16:10 resolution which is narrower but taller than the 16:9 option, and therefore larger in both dimensions than the base standard (e.g., compare {{resx|1366|768}} and {{resx|1280|800}}, both commonly labelled as WXGA, vs the base {{resx|1024|768}} XGA).
;Quad(ruple) (Q)
;Quad(ruple) (Q)
:Four times as many pixels compared to the base resolution, i.e. twice the horizontal and vertical resolution respectively.
:Four times as many pixels compared to the base resolution, i.e. twice the horizontal and vertical resolution respectively.
Line 886: Line 886:
:Sixteen times as many pixels compared to the base resolution, i.e. four times the horizontal and vertical resolutions respectively.
:Sixteen times as many pixels compared to the base resolution, i.e. four times the horizontal and vertical resolutions respectively.
;Super (S), eXtended (X), Plus (+) and/or Ultra (U)
;Super (S), eXtended (X), Plus (+) and/or Ultra (U)
:Vaguer terms denoting successive incremental steps up the resolution ladder from some comparative, more established base, usually somewhat less severe a jump than quartering or Quadrupling—typically less than doubling, and sometimes not even as much of a change as making a "wide" version; for example SVGA (800×600 vs 640×480), SXGA (1280×1024 vs 1024×768), SXGA+ (1400×1050 vs 1280×1024) and UXGA (1600×1200 vs 1024×768 - or more fittingly, vs the 1280×1024 of SXGA, the conceptual "next step down" at the time of UXGA's inception, or the 1400×1050 of SXGA+). Given the use of "X" in "XGA", it is not often used as an additional modifier (e.g. there is no such thing as XVGA except as an alternative designation for SXGA) unless its meaning would be unambiguous.
:Vaguer terms denoting successive incremental steps up the resolution ladder from some comparative, more established base, usually somewhat less severe a jump than quartering or Quadrupling—typically less than doubling, and sometimes not even as much of a change as making a "wide" version; for example SVGA ({{resx|800|600}} vs {{resx|640|480}}), SXGA ({{resx|1280|1024}} vs {{resx|1024|768}}), SXGA+ ({{resx|1400|1050}} vs {{resx|1280|1024}}) and UXGA ({{resx|1600|1200}} vs {{resx|1024|768}} - or more fittingly, vs the {{resx|1280|1024}} of SXGA, the conceptual "next step down" at the time of UXGA's inception, or the {{resx|1400|1050}} of SXGA+). Given the use of "X" in "XGA", it is not often used as an additional modifier (e.g. there is no such thing as XVGA except as an alternative designation for SXGA) unless its meaning would be unambiguous.


These prefixes are also often combined, as in [[WQXGA]] or [[WHUXGA]], with levels of stacking not hindered by the same consideration towards readability as the decline of the added "X" - especially as there is not even a defined hierarchy or value for S/X/U/+ modifiers.
These prefixes are also often combined, as in [[WQXGA]] or [[WHUXGA]], with levels of stacking not hindered by the same consideration towards readability as the decline of the added "X" - especially as there is not even a defined hierarchy or value for S/X/U/+ modifiers.

Latest revision as of 15:13, 22 September 2025

Template:Short description Template:Multiple issues

Computer display standards are a combination of aspect ratio, display size, display resolution, color depth, and refresh rate. They are associated with specific expansion cards, video connectors, and monitors.

History

File:Tvm-md-3-prevga-monitor-front-and-rear.jpg
Front and rear views of the TVM MD-3 cathode-ray tube monitor (Enhanced Graphics Adapter era). Note the DE-9 connector, cryptic mode switch, contrast and brightness controls at front, and the V-Size and V-Hold knobs at rear, which allow the control of the scaling and signal to CRT refresh rate synchronization respectively.

Various computer display standards or display modes have been used in the history of the personal computer. They are often a combination of aspect ratio (specified as width-to-height ratio), display resolution (specified as the width and height in pixels), color depth (measured in bits per pixel), and refresh rate (expressed in hertz). Associated with the screen resolution and refresh rate is a display adapter. Earlier display adapters were simple frame-buffers, but later display standards also specified a more extensive set of display functions and software controlled interface.

Beyond display modes, the VESA industry organization has defined several standards related to power management and device identification, while ergonomics standards are set by the TCO.

Standards

A number of common resolutions have been used with computers descended from the original IBM PC. Some of these are now supported by other families of personal computers. These are de facto standards, usually originated by one manufacturer and reverse-engineered by others, though the VESA group has co-ordinated the efforts of several leading video display adapter manufacturers. Video standards associated with IBM-PC-descended personal computers are shown in the diagram and table below, alongside those of early Macintosh and other makes for comparison. (From the early 1990s onwards, most manufacturers moved over to PC display standards thanks to widely available and affordable hardware).

File:Vector Video Standards2.svg
Comparison of video resolutions. The curved lines show the thresholds for resolutions with at least 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 million pixels.
Table of computer display standards (by height and width)
Video standard Full name Description Display resolution (Maximum) Width (Maximum) Height (Maximum) Area Storage aspect ratio (effectively: Display aspect ratio) Color depth (2^bpp colors)
(pixels) (px) (px) (px)
QQVGA Quarter Quarter Video Graphics Array Used on some portable devices, and is a common alternative resolution to QCIF for webcams and other online video streams in low-bandwidth situations, and on video modes of early and later low-end digital cameras. Template:Resx (19k) 160 120 19,200 4:3
UNNAMED UNNAMED A common size for LCDs manufactured for small consumer electronics, basic mobile phones and feature phones, typically in a 1.7" to 1.9" diagonal size. This LCD is often used in portrait (Template:Resx) orientation. The unusual 5:4 aspect ratio makes the display slightly different from QQVGA dimensions. Template:Resx (20k) 160 128 20,480 5:4
UNNAMED UNNAMED A shared size for older portable video game systems. The nearly-square (but landscape) aspect ratio and coarse pixel resolution gave these games a characteristic visual style. Colour depth ranged from 4 colours (2 bpp) with the original Game Boy, through 16–32 colours (4–5 bpp) with the Game Gear, to a maximum of 56 colours (equivalent of 6 bpp) from a wider palette with the Game Boy Color. Also appears as a YouTube resolution option ("144p")Script error: No such module "Unsubst".. Template:Resx (23k) 160 144 23,040 10:9 (effectively 4:3 (non-square pixels) on Game Gear) 2 bpp (6 bpp effective)
HQVGA Half Quarter Video Graphics Array Used with some smaller, cheaper portable devices, including the Nintendo Game Boy Advance. Template:Resx (38k) 240 160 38,400 3:2
ST Low/Med Resolution Atari ST (etc.) Colour, Broadcast-standard Atari ST line. Colour modes using NTSC or PAL-compliant televisions, and monochrome, composite video or RGB-component monitors. Template:Resx,
Template:Resx
640 200 128,000 4:3 (or 16:5 and 16:10 with square pixels) 2–4 bpp for ST, 2–15 bpp on the Falcon.
CGA Color Graphics Adapter Introduced in 1981 by IBM, as the first colour display standard for the IBM PC. The standard CGA graphics cards were equipped with 16 kB video RAM.[1] Template:Resx (128k)
Template:Resx (64k)
Template:Resx (32k)
640 200 128,000 16:5
16:10/8:5
4:5 (effectively 4:3 on CRTs; various aspects on LCDs)
1 bpp
2 bpp
4 bpp
QVGA Quarter Video Graphics Array Half the resolution in each dimension as standard VGA. First appeared as a VESA mode (134h=256 color, 135h=Hi-Color) that primarily allowed Template:Resx character text with graphics, and should not be confused with CGA (Template:Resx); QVGA is normally used when describing screens on portable devices (PDAs, pocket media players, feature phones, smartphones, etc.). No set colour depth or refresh rate is associated with this standard or those that follow, as it is dependent both on the manufacturing quality of the screen and the capabilities of the attached display driver hardware, and almost always incorporates an LCD panel with no visible line-scanning. However, it would typically be in the 8-to-12 bpp (256–4096 colours) through 18 bpp (262,144 colours) range. Template:Resx (77k) 320 240 76,800 4:3
TV Computer Non-interlaced TV-as-monitor Various Apple, Atari, Commodore, Sinclair, Acorn, Tandy and other home and small-office computers introduced from 1977 through to the mid-1980s. They used televisions for display output and had a typical usable screen resolution from 102–320 pixels wide and usually 192–256 lines high, in non-interlaced (NI) mode for a more stable image (displaying a full image on each <templatestyles src="Fraction/styles.css" />150th/<templatestyles src="Fraction/styles.css" />160th-second field, instead of splitting it across each frame). The limited resolution led to displays with a characteristic wide overscan border around the active area. Some more powerful machines were able to display higher horizontal resolutions—either in text-mode alone or in low-colour bitmap graphics, and typically by halving the width of each pixel, rather than physically expanding the display area—but were still confined in the vertical dimension by the relatively slow horizontal scanning rate of a domestic TV set. These same standards—albeit with progressively greater colour depth and upstream graphical processing ability—would see extended use and popularity in TV-connected game consoles right through to the end of the 20th century. Template:Resx NI (high-end), Template:Resx NI (typical), Template:Resx NI (low-end) 640 256 163,840 4:3 (non-square pixels) 1–4 bpp typical, 2 or 3 bpp common.
WQVGA Wide Quarter Video Graphics Array Effectively <templatestyles src="Fraction/styles.css" />116 the total resolution (<templatestyles src="Fraction/styles.css" />14 in each dimension) of "Full HD", but with the height aligned to an 8-pixel "macroblock" boundary. Common in small-screen video applications, including portable DVD players and the Sony PSP. Template:Resx (131k) 480 272 130,560 c. 1% narrower than 16:9 (30:17 exact)
Mac Mono 9" Original Apple Macintosh display The single fixed-screen mode used in first-generation (128k and 512k) Apple Mac computers, launched in 1984, with a monochrome 9" CRT integrated into the body of the computer. Used to display one of the first mass-market full-time GUIs, and one of the earliest non-interlaced default displays with more than 256 lines of vertical resolution. (Early models used a Template:Resx screen; both standards are cut down from the Template:Resx of the preceding Lisa model) Template:Resx (175k) 512 342 175,104 Very nearly 3:2 (to within 0.2%); 256:171 exact. Displayed with square pixels on a moderately wide-screen monitor (equivalent to 16:10.67 in modern terms). bpp
Hercules A monochrome display capable of sharp text and graphics for its time. Very popular with the Lotus 1-2-3 spreadsheet application, which was one of PC's first killer apps. Introduced in 1982. Template:Resx (251k) 720 348 250,560 60:29 (effectively 4:3) 1 bpp
EGA Enhanced Graphics Adapter Introduced in 1984 by IBM. A resolution of Template:Resx pixels of 16 different colours in 4 bits per pixel (bpp), selectable from a 64-colour palette in 2 bits per each of red-green-blue (RGB) unit.[1] Other commonly used modes were the existing CGA Template:Resx and Template:Resx resolutions in 4 bpp, with a fixed palette corresponding to the 16 colours available in CGA text mode, allowing an EGA card to be used in full colour with an unmodified CGA monitor by setting the correct DIP switch options; plus full EGA resolution (and CGA hi-res) in monochrome, if installed memory was insufficient for full colour at above Template:Resx. Template:Resx (224k), Template:Resx (128k), Template:Resx (64k) 640 350 224,000 64:35, 16:5 and 16:10/8:5 (all effectively 4:3) 4 bpp
MDA Monochrome Display Adapter The original standard on IBM PCs and IBM PC XTs with 4 kB video RAM. Introduced in 1981 by IBM. Supports text mode only.[1] Template:Resx (252k) 720 350 252,000 72:35 (effectively 4:3 (non-square pixels) on CRTs but could be a variety of aspects on LCDs) bpp
Orchid Graphics Adapter A monochrome display that expanded Monochrome Display Adapter's capabilities with graphics. Introduced in 1982. Template:Resx 720 350 252,000 72:35 (effectively 4:3 (non-square pixels) on CRTs but could be a variety of aspects on LCDs) 1 bpp
ST High Resolution Atari ST (etc.) Monochrome, proprietary standard Atari ST line. High resolution monochrome mode using a custom non-interlaced monitor with the slightly lower vertical resolution (in order to be an integer multiple of low and medium resolution and thus utilize the same amount of RAM for the framebuffer) allowing a "flicker free" 71.25 Hz refresh rate, higher even than the highest refresh rate provided by VGA. All machines in the ST series could also use colour or monochrome VGA monitors with a proper cable or physical adapter, and all but the TT could display Template:Resx at 71.25 Hz on VGA monitors. Template:Resx 640 400 256,000 4:3 (or 16:10 with square pixels) 1 bpp for ST, on the Falcon: 1-8 bpp grayscale on the ST monochrome monitor, and 8 bpp colour on VGA/multisync monitors.
PowerBook internal panel PowerBook, early generations The first PowerBook, released in 1991, replaced the original Mac Portable (basically an original Mac with an LCD, keyboard and trackball in a lunchbox-style shell), and introduced a new Template:Resx greyscale screen. This was joined in 1993 with the PowerBook 165c, which kept the same resolution but added colour capability similar to that of Mac II (256 colours from a palette of 16.7 million). Template:Resx (256k) 640 400 256,000 16:10/8:5 (square pixels) 8 bpp
Professional Graphics Controller With on-board 2D and 3D acceleration introduced in 1984 for the 8-bit PC-bus, intended for CAD applications, a triple-board display adapter with built-in processor, and displaying high-resolution, full-colour graphics at a 60 Hz frame rate.[1] Template:Resx (307k) 640 480 307,200 4:3 8 bpp
MCGA Multi-Color Graphics Array Introduced by IBM on ISA-based PS/2 models in 1987, with reduced cost compared to VGA. MCGA had a Template:Resx 256-colour (from a 262,144 colour palette) mode, and a Template:Resx mode only in monochrome due to 64k video memory, compared to the 256k memory of VGA.[1] Template:Resx (307k),
Template:Resx (64k)
640 480 307,200 4:3 (square pixels)
16:10 (effectively 4:3)
8 bpp
1 bpp
VGA Video Graphics Array Introduced on MCA-based PS/2 models in 1987, it replaced the digital TTL signaling of EGA and earlier standards with analog RGBHV signaling, using the synonymous VGA connector. As with EGA, the VGA standard actually encompasses a set of different resolutions; Template:Resx is sometimes referred to as "VGA resolution" today, however as per the original standard this mode actually only supports 16 colours (4 bpp) at 60 Hz. Other common display modes also defined as VGA include [[Mode 13h|Template:Resx at 256 colours]] (8 bpp) (standard VGA resolution for DOS games that stems from halving the pixel rate of Template:Resx, but doubling color depth) and a text mode with Template:Resx pixels; these modes run at 70 Hz and use non-square pixels, so 4:3 aspect correction is required for correct display.

Furthermore, VGA displays and adapters are generally capable of Mode X graphics, an undocumented mode to allow increased non-standard resolutions, most commonly Template:Resx (with 8 bpp and square pixels) at 60 Hz.[1] VGA, like the majority of the following standards, was capable of displaying most standard modes featured by IBM-compatible PCs—CGA, EGA, MDA and MCGA—but typically not Hercules or PGA/PGC.

Template:Resx (307k) (hi-res graphics and LCD text)
Template:Resx (CRT text; 288k equivalent)
Template:Resx (64k), Template:Resx (75k)
640 480 307,200 4:3
9:5 (non-square PAR 4:3)
16:10/8:5 (non-square PAR 4:3)
4 bpp
4 bpp
8 bpp
Video monitor I/NI Full-broadcast resolution video monitor or television Amiga, Acorn Archimedes, Atari Falcon, and others. They used NTSC or PAL-compliant televisions and monochrome, composite video or RGB-component monitors. The interlaced (i or I) mode produced visible flickering of finer details, eventually fixable by use of scan doubler devices and VGA monitors. Template:Resxi/576i maximum. Typically Template:Resxi/512i or Template:Resx/256 NI, and Template:Resx/256 NI for games. 720 576 414,720 4:3 (non-square pixels) Up to 6 bpp for Amiga (8 bpp with later models), typically 2–4 bpp for most hi-res applications (saving memory and processing time), 4–5 bpp for games and "fake" 12/18 bpp for static images (HAM mode). Up to 15 bpp for Archimedes and Falcon (12 bpp for TT), but typically 4 bpp in use.
SVGA Super Video Graphics Array An extension to VGA defined by VESA for IBM PC-compatible computers in 1989 meant to take advantage of video cards that exceeded the minimum 256 kB defined in the VGA standard. For instance, one of the early supported modes was Template:Resx in 16 colours at a slightly lower 56 Hz refresh rate, leading to Template:Resx sometimes being referred to as "SVGA resolution" today.

Over the course of the early-to-mid-1990s, "SVGA" became a quasi-standard term in PC games, typically referring to a Template:Resx resolution using 256 colours (8 bpp) at 60 Hz refresh rate. Many other higher and lower modes were standardized in the VESA BIOS Extensions, leading to the establishment of "SVGA" and "VESA" as catch-all terms encompassing output modes that surpassed the original VGA specifications.

Template:Resx (480k)
Template:Resx (307k)
800 600 480,000 4:3 4 bpp
8 bpp
Mac Colour Apple Mac II and later models The second-generation Macintosh, launched in 1987, came with colour (and greyscale) capability as standard, at two levels, depending on monitor size—Template:Resx (<templatestyles src="Fraction/styles.css" />14 of the later XGA standard) on a 12" (4:3) colour or greyscale (monochrome) monitor; Template:Resx with a larger (13" or 14") high-resolution monitor (superficially similar to VGA, but at a higher 67 Hz refresh rate)—with 8-bit colour/256 grey shades at the lower resolution, and either 4-bit or 8-bit colour (16/256 grey) in high resolution depending on installed memory (256 or 512 kB), all out of a full 24-bit master palette. The result was equivalent to VGA or even PGC—but with a wide palette—at a point simultaneous with the IBM launch of VGA.

Later, larger monitors (15" and 16") allowed use of an SVGA-like binary-half-megapixel Template:Resx resolution (at 75 Hz) that was eventually used as the default setting for the original, late-1990s iMac. Even larger 17" and 19" monitors could attain higher resolutions still, when connected to a suitably capable computer, but apart from the Template:Resx XGA+ mode discussed further below, Mac resolutions beyond Template:Resx tended to fall into line with PC standards, using what were essentially rebadged PC monitors with a different cable connection. Mac models after the II (Power Mac, Quadra, etc.) also allowed at first 16-bit High Colour (65,536, or "Thousands of" colours), and then 24-bit True Colour (16.7M, or "Millions of" colours), but much like PC standards beyond XGA, the increase in colour depth past 8 bpp was not strictly tied to changing resolution standards.

Template:Resx (519k), Template:Resx (307k), Template:Resx (197k) 832 624 519,168 4:3 bpp, 8 bpp, and later 16/24 bpp
HD High Definition (720p) This display aspect ratio is among the most common in recentTemplate:When notebook computers and desktop monitors.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Template:Resx (921k) 1280 720 921,600 16:9 to within 0.05% accuracy

(683:384 exact)

24 bpp
8514 Precursor to XGA and released shortly after VGA in 1987. 8514/A cards displayed interlaced video at 43.5 Hz in a Template:Resx resolution, and at Template:Resx, 60 Hz non-interlaced, both with up to 256 colours.[1]

The high-resolution mode introduced by 8514/A became a de facto general standard in a succession of computing and digital-media fields for more than two decades, arguably more so than SVGA, with successive IBM and clone video cards and CRT monitors (a multisync monitor's grade being broadly determinable by whether it could display Template:Resx at all, or show it interlaced, non-interlaced, or "flicker-free"), LCD panels (the standard resolution for 14" and 15" 4:3 desktop monitors, and a whole generation of 11–15" laptops), early plasma and HD ready LCD televisions (albeit at a stretched 16:9 aspect ratio, showing down-scaled material), professional video projectors, and most recently, tablet computers.

Template:Resx (786k), Template:Resx (307k) 1024 768 786,432 4:3 8 bpp
XGA Extended Graphics Array An IBM display standard introduced in 1990. XGA built on 8514/A's existing Template:Resx mode and added support for "high colour" (65,536 colours, 16 bpp) at Template:Resx. The second revision ("XGA-2") was a more thorough upgrade, offering higher refresh rates (75 Hz and up, non-interlaced, up to at least Template:Resx), improved performance, and a fully programmable display engine capable of almost any resolution within its physical limits. For example, Template:Resx (5:4) or Template:Resx (≈4:3) in 16 colours at 60 Hz, Template:Resx [14h] Text Mode (Template:Resx characters); Template:Resx in 256 or 64k colours; and even as high as Template:Resx (at a reduced 50 Hz scan rate) with a high-quality multisync monitor (or an otherwise non-standard Template:Resx at 60 Hz on a lower-end one capable of high refresh rates at Template:Resx, but only interlaced mode at Template:Resx).[1] However, the extended modes required custom drivers, and so only the basic options (1024×768×8 I, 640×480×16 NI, high-res text) were commonly used outside Windows and other hardware-abstracting graphical environments. Template:Resx (786k)
Template:Resx (307k), Template:Resx (text, 422k equivalent)
1024 768 786,432 4:3
4:3, 66:25 (effectively 4:3)
8 bpp
16 bpp
WXGA Widescreen Extended Graphics Array A wide version of the XGA format. This display aspect ratio was common in widescreen notebook computers until c. 2010. Template:Resx (1,049k)[2],
Template:Resx (1,044k),
Template:Resx (1,024k)
1366 768 1,049,088 ≈16:9 (Template:Resx and Template:Resx), 16:10 (Template:Resx) 24 bpp
XGA+ Extended Graphics Array Plus Although not an official name, this term is now used to refer to Template:Resx, which is the largest 4:3 array yielding less than a binary megapixel (2^20, 1048576 pixels, 1048 decimal kilopixels), thus allowing the greatest "normal" resolution at common colour depths with a standard amount of video memory (128 kB, 512 kB, 1 MB, 2 MB, etc.). Variants of this were used by NeXT (at Template:Resx), Apple (at Template:Resx), and Sun Microsystems (at Template:Resx) for 17" to 21" CRT displays.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".. Template:Resx (995k)
Template:Resx (932k)
Template:Resx (1,002k)
Template:Resx (1,037k)
1152 864 995,328 4:3 8 bpp
16 bpp
WXGA+ (WSXGA) Widescreen Extended Graphics Array PLUS An enhanced version of the WXGA format. This display aspect ratio was common in widescreen notebook computers, and many 19" widescreen LCD monitors until c. 2010. Template:Resx (1,296k) 1440 900 1,296,000 16:10 24 bpp
HD+ High Definition Plus (900p) Template:Resx (1,440k) 1600 900 1,440,000 16:9 24 bpp
TT High Resolution Atari TT (etc.) Monochrome, proprietary standard Atari TT line. High resolution monochrome mode using a custom non-interlaced ECL monitor, allowing a higher, "flicker free" 70 Hz refresh rate. Template:Resx (1229k) 1280 960 1,228,800 4:3 1 bpp for TT.
SXGA Super Extended Graphics Array A widely used de facto standard, introduced with XGA-2 and other early "multiscan" graphics cards and monitors, with an unusual aspect ratio of 5:4 (1.25:1) instead of the more common 4:3 (1.3:1), meaning that even 4:3 pictures and video will appear letterboxed on the narrower 5:4 screens. This is generally the native resolution—with, therefore, square pixels—of standard 17" and 19" LCD monitors. It was often a recommended resolution for 17" and 19" CRTs also, though as they were usually produced in a 4:3 aspect ratio, it either gave non-square pixels or required adjustment to show small vertical borders at each side of the image. Allows 24-bit colour in 4 MB of graphics memory, or 4-bit colour in 640 kB.
  • Some manufacturers,Script error: No such module "Unsubst". noting that the de facto industry standard was VGA (Video Graphics Array), termed this the Extended Video Graphics Array, or XVGA.
Template:Resx (1,310k) 1280 1024 1,310,720 5:4 24 bpp
SXGA+ Super Extended Graphics Array PLUS Used on 14" and 15" notebook LCD screens and a few smaller screens, until the eventualTemplate:When? market-wide phasing-out of 4:3 aspect displays. Template:Resx (1,470k) 1400 1050 1,470,000 4:3 24 bpp
WSXGA+ Widescreen Super Extended Graphics Array Plus A wide version of the SXGA+ format, the native resolution for many 22" widescreen LCD monitors, also used in larger, wide-screen notebook computers until c. 2010. Template:Resx (1,764k) 1680 1050 1,764,000 16:10 24 bpp
FHD Full High Definition (1080p) This display aspect ratio is the native resolution for many 24" widescreen LCD monitors, and is expected to also become a standard resolution for smaller-to-medium-sized wide-aspect tablet computers in the near future (as of 2012). Template:Resx (2,073k) 1920 1080 2,073,600 16:9 24 bpp
DCI 2K Digital Cinema Initiatives 2K Baseline standard for digital cinema capture, post production and presentation. Template:Resx (2,212k) 2048 1080 2,211,840 ≈19:10,≈17:9

(256:135 or 1.8962:1 exact)

48 bpp (at 24 frame/s)
UNNAMED UNNAMED Sometimes casually referred to as "1080p ultrawide". Referred to occasionally as "UW-UXGA". Template:Resx (2,765k) 2560 1080 2,764,800 ≈21:9

(64:27, or 2.370:1, or 21.3:9 exact)

24 bpp
QWXGA Quad Wide Extended Graphics Array Samsung has a QWXGA resolution 23" LCD monitor, the 2342BWX. Template:Resx (2,359k) 2048 1152 2,359,296 16:9
UXGA Ultra Extended Graphics Array A de facto high-resolution standard. This is the native resolution for many 20" LCD monitors, and was a recommended mode for some high-end 21" CRTs. Template:Resx (1,920k) 1600 1200 1,920,000 4:3 24 bpp
WUXGA Widescreen Ultra Extended Graphics Array A wide version of the UXGA format. This display aspect ratio was popular on high-end 15" and 17" widescreen notebook computers, as well as on many 23–27" widescreen LCD monitors, until c. 2010. It is also a popular resolution for home cinema projectors, besides 1080p, in order to show non-widescreen material slightly taller than widescreen (and therefore also slightly wider than it might otherwise be), and is the highest resolution supported by single-link DVI at standard colour depth and scan rate (i.e., no less than 24 bpp and 60 Hz non-interlaced) Template:Resx (2,304k) 1920 1200 2,304,000 16:10 24 bpp
UNNAMED UNNAMED Used on Microsoft Surface 3. Template:Resx (2,458k) 1920 1280 2,457,600 3:2 24 bpp
UNNAMED UNNAMED 4:3 superset of 1080p, common on high-resolution CRTs. Template:Resx (2,765k) 1920 1440 2,764,800 4:3 24 bpp
UNNAMED UNNAMED Used on Microsoft Surface Pro 3. Template:Resx (3,110k) 2160 1440 3,110,400 3:2 24 bpp
QHD Quad High Definition The native resolution for many higher end 27" widescreen IPS panels and smartphones (from the mid-2010s onward); often referred to as "WQHD" Template:Resx (3,686k) 2560 1440 3,686,400 16:9 24 bpp
UNNAMED UNNAMED Used on LG G6, LG V30 and Pixel 2 XL smartphones. Template:Resx (4,147k) 2880 1440 4,147,200 18:9/2:1 24 bpp
UNNAMED UNNAMED Used on Samsung Galaxy S8, Galaxy Note 8, and Galaxy S9 smartphones. Template:Resx (4,262k) 2960 1440 4,262,400 18.5:9/37:18 24 bpp
UWQHD Ultra-Wide Quad HD Sometimes casually referred to as "1440p ultrawide". Template:Resx (4,954k) 3440 1440 4,953,600 ≈21:9

(43:18, or 2.38:1, or 21.5:9 exact)

24 bpp
QXGA Quad Extended Graphics Array This is the highest resolution that generally can be displayed on analog computer monitors (most CRTs), and the highest resolution that most analogue video cards and other display transmission hardware (cables, switch boxes, signal boosters) are rated for (at 60 Hz refresh). 24-bit colour requires 9 MB of video memory (and transmission bandwidth) for a single frame. It is also the native resolution of medium-to-large latest-generation (2012) standard-aspect tablet computers. Template:Resx (3,146k) 2048 1536 3,145,728 4:3 24 bpp
WQXGA Widescreen Quad Extended Graphics Array A version of the XGA format, the native resolution for many 30" widescreen LCD monitors. Also, the highest resolution supported by dual-link DVI at a standard colour depth and non-interlaced refresh rate (i.e. at least 24 bpp and 60 Hz). Used on MacBook Pro with Retina display (13.3"). Requires 12 MB of memory/bandwidth for a single frame. Template:Resx (4,096k) 2560 1600 4,096,000 16:10 24 bpp
UW4K Ultra-Wide 4K Commonly used on Ultra HD Blu-ray discs.Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Template:Resx (6,144k) 3840 1600 6,144,000 12:5 24 bpp
QWXGA+[3] Quad Wide Extended Graphics Array Plus Used on MacBook Pro with Retina display (15.4"). Double the resolution of the previous Template:Resx standard in each dimension. Template:Resx (5,184k) 2880 1800 5,184,000 16:10 24 bpp
UNNAMED UNNAMED Used on Microsoft Surface Pro 4. Template:Resx (4,991k) 2736 1824 4,990,464 3:2 24 bpp
UNNAMED UNNAMED Used on 14" Macbook Pro. Template:Resx (5,939k) 3024 1964 5,939,136 ≈14:9 10 bpp
UNNAMED UNNAMED Used on Microsoft Surface Book. Template:Resx (6,000k) 3000 2000 6,000,000 3:2 24 bpp
QSXGA Quad Super Extended Graphics Array Double the resolution of SXGA in each dimension. Template:Resx (5,243k) 2560 2048 5,242,800 5:4 24 bpp
WQSXGA Wide Quad Super Extended Graphics Array Template:Resx (6,554k) 3200 2048 6,553,600 ≈16:10

(25:16 exact)

24 bpp
UHD 4K Ultra High-Definition, or Quad Full High-Definition Four times the resolution of 1080p. Requires a dual-link DVI, category 2 (high-speed) HDMI, DisplayPort or a single Thunderbolt link, and a reduced scan rate (up to 30 Hz); a DisplayPort 1.2 connection can support this resolution at 60 Hz, or 30 Hz in stereoscopic 3D. Template:Resx (8,294k) 3840 2160 8,294,400 16:9 24 bpp
DCI 4K Digital Cinema Initiatives 4K The current standard (2012) in digital cinema. Double Hres and Vres of DCI 2K. Template:Resx (8,847k) 4096 2160 8,847,360 ≈19:10,≈17:9

(256:135 or 1.8962:1 exact)

48 bpp (at 24 frame/s)
UW5K Ultra-Wide 5K Also referred to as WUHD in consumer displays. 21:9 aspect ratio version of UHD 4K, defined in CTA-861-G, or resulting from Template:Resx with 4:3 pixel ratio in HDMI 2.0/2.1. Template:Resx (11,059k) 5120 2160 11,059,200 ≈21:9

(64:27, or 2.370:1, or 21.3:9 exact)

24 bpp
UNNAMED UNNAMED Used on 16" Macbook Pro. Template:Resx (7,721k) 3456 2234 7,720,704 ≈14:9 10 bpp
QUXGA Quad Ultra Extended Graphics Array Template:Resx (7,680k) 3200 2400 7,680,000 4:3 24 bpp
WQUXGA Wide Quad Ultra Extended Graphics Array The IBM T220/T221 LCD monitors supported this resolution, but they are discontinued and no longer available.

Also used for Dell laptops from 2019 onwards.

Template:Resx (9,216k) 3840 2400 9,216,000 16:10 24 bpp
UHD 5K 5K Ultra High-Definition Often referred to as "5K" or "UHD+". Having exactly double the dimensions of WQHD's Template:Resx (3686k), used on Apple's late-2014 27" iMac Retina 5K Display Template:Resx (14,745k) 5120 2880 14,745,600 16:9 24 bpp
UNNAMED UNNAMED Used on Microsoft Surface Studio. Template:Resx (13,500k) 4500 3000 13,500,000 3:2 24 bpp
HXGA Hex[adecatuple] Extended Graphics Array Template:Resx (12,583k) 4096 3072 12,582,912 4:3 24 bpp
WHXGA Wide Hex[adecatuple] Extended Graphics Array Template:Resx (16,384k) 5120 3200 16,384,000 16:10 24 bpp
UW8K Ultra-Wide 8K Template:Resx (24,576k) 7680 3200 24,576,000 12:5 24 bpp
HSXGA Hex[adecatuple] Super Extended Graphics Array Template:Resx (20,972k) 5120 4096 20,971,520 5:4 24 bpp
WHSXGA Wide Hex[adecatuple] Super Extended Graphics Array Template:Resx (26,214k) 6400 4096 26,212,400 ≈16:10

(25:16 exact)

24 bpp
UHD 8K 8K Ultra-high-definition (Super Hi-Vision) Consumer video format defined by CTA-861-G. Provides effectively "pixel-less" imagery even on extra-large displays. Template:Resx (33,177k) 7680 4320 33,177,600 16:9 30–36 bpp
UHD 10K 21:9 aspect ratio version of UHD 8K, defined in CTA-861-G (VIC 210-217), or resulting from Template:Resx with 4:3 pixel ratio in HDMI 2.1. Template:Resx (44,236k) 10240 4320 44,236,800 ≈21:9

(64:27, or 2.370:1, or 21.3:9 exact)

30–36 bpp
HUXGA Hex[adecatuple] Ultra Extended Graphics Array Template:Resx (30,720k) 6400 4800 30,720,000 4:3 24 bpp
WHUXGA Wide Hex[adecatuple] Ultra Extended Graphics Array Template:Resx (36,864k) 7680 4800 36,864,000 16:10 24 bpp

Display resolution prefixes

Although the common standard prefixes super and ultra do not indicate specific modifiers to base standard resolutions, several others do:

Quarter (Q or q)
A quarter of the base resolution. E.g. QVGA, a term for a Template:Resx resolution, half the width and height of VGA, hence the quarter total resolution. The "Q" prefix usually indicates "Quad" (4 times as many, not 1/4 times as many) in higher resolutions, and sometimes "q" is used instead of "Q" to specify quarter (by analogy with SI prefixes m/MScript error: No such module "Unsubst".), but this usage is not consistent.[4]
Wide (W)
The base resolution increased by increasing the width and keeping the height constant, for square or near-square pixels on a widescreen display, usually with an aspect ratio of either 16:9 (adding an extra 1/3rd width vs a standard 4:3 display) or 16:10 (adding an extra 1/5th). However, it is sometimes used to denote a resolution that would have roughly the same total pixel count as this, but in a different aspect and sharing neither the horizontal OR vertical resolution—typically for a 16:10 resolution which is narrower but taller than the 16:9 option, and therefore larger in both dimensions than the base standard (e.g., compare Template:Resx and Template:Resx, both commonly labelled as WXGA, vs the base Template:Resx XGA).
Quad(ruple) (Q)
Four times as many pixels compared to the base resolution, i.e. twice the horizontal and vertical resolution respectively.
Hex(adecatuple) (H)
Sixteen times as many pixels compared to the base resolution, i.e. four times the horizontal and vertical resolutions respectively.
Super (S), eXtended (X), Plus (+) and/or Ultra (U)
Vaguer terms denoting successive incremental steps up the resolution ladder from some comparative, more established base, usually somewhat less severe a jump than quartering or Quadrupling—typically less than doubling, and sometimes not even as much of a change as making a "wide" version; for example SVGA (Template:Resx vs Template:Resx), SXGA (Template:Resx vs Template:Resx), SXGA+ (Template:Resx vs Template:Resx) and UXGA (Template:Resx vs Template:Resx - or more fittingly, vs the Template:Resx of SXGA, the conceptual "next step down" at the time of UXGA's inception, or the Template:Resx of SXGA+). Given the use of "X" in "XGA", it is not often used as an additional modifier (e.g. there is no such thing as XVGA except as an alternative designation for SXGA) unless its meaning would be unambiguous.

These prefixes are also often combined, as in WQXGA or WHUXGA, with levels of stacking not hindered by the same consideration towards readability as the decline of the added "X" - especially as there is not even a defined hierarchy or value for S/X/U/+ modifiers.

See also

References

Template:Reflist

External links

Script error: No such module "Navbox".

  1. a b c d e f g h Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  3. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  4. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".