Friday, September 17, 2010

what exactly is the difference between aspect ratio and resolution within a comuter or small screen peak?



Answer:

Aspevt ratio is the ratio of loftiness to width (standard or wide open screen) while resolution is the number of pixels of color per square inch. THe higher the resolution the better the picture, while the cavernous screen mode allows you to viewpoint a movie the way it looks surrounded by the theaters, while standard aspect ratio cuts away a lot of the sides of respectively frame.
pi are squared
Aspect ratio means the proportions of largeness to width - e.g. if your peak is 1024 pixels wide by 768 giant, it's an aspect ratio of 4:3 (the height is 3 station of the width). Resolution is the actual number of pixels in respectively direction - 1280 is a higher resolution (more pixels on the screen) than 1024.
aspect ratio - TV & most computer eyeshade aspect ration is 4:3 meaning that the eyeshade is almost square, while the other aspect ratio is the one made for "movie" 16:9 like most Plasma screen & LCD screen (rectangular) since movie house peak are rectangular not "square" as a normal TV would.



Resolution - surrounded by a computer screen(progressive scan) it is the number of dots(pixels) in a computer eyeshade usually it is rated as SVGA (640 x 480 pixels/dots); XGA, SXGA, UXGA etc. The superior the number of pixels the higher the resolution of the monitor the more expensive it become. While TV screens are mostly interlace scan so the resolution is measured by the number of horizontal lines it take in decree to scan one picture, the higher the number of lines the better the resolution is, the better the picture is reproduce (of course the CRT/picture tube themselves affect the feature of picture that is reproduce). hope this clear your cross-question

No comments:

Post a Comment