Display Adapter Used As
Display Adapter Used As
Display Adapter Used As
VGA
Short for Video Graphics Array, VGA is a popular display standard
developed by IBM and introduced in 1987.
VGA provides 640 x 480 resolution color display screens with
a refresh rate of 60 Hz and 16 colors displayed at a time.
If the resolution is lowered to 320 x 200, 256 colors are shown.
VGA utilizes analog signals, which means it's only capable of lower
resolutions and a lower quality display on screens.
VGA pin functions
.
It’s a three row 15 pin connector comes with a screw type locking
mechanism.
A VGA cable carries analog components RGBHV video signal (Red, Green,
Blue, Horizontal sync, Vertical Sync) and DDC data.
Due to VGA carries analog signal it may suffer signal loss if increase the
wire length.
The maximum resolution that a VGA can provide is 2048 x 1536 pixels.
The disadvantage of a VGA is it doesn’t carry audio signal
Specifications
The original VGA specifications are as follows
256 KB Video
16-color and 256-color paletted display modes.
262,144-color global palette (6 bits, and therefore 64 possible levels,
for each of the red, green, and blue channels via the RAMDAC)
Selectable 25.175 MHz or 28.322 MHz master pixel clock
Usual line rate fixed at 31.46875 kHz
Maximum of 640 horizontal pixels
Maximum of 480 lines
Refresh rates at up to 60 Hz
Vertical blank interrupt
Planar mode: up to 16 colors (4 bit planes)
Packed-pixel mode: 256 colors (Mode 13h)
Hardware smooth scrolling support
No Blitter, but supports very fast data transfers via "VGA latch"
registers
SVGA
The table above provides the pinouts and signal names for the connector
SVGA uses three analog pins to send color information to the monitor, Red, Green
and Blue and two additional analog sync pins
XGA
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