Difference between revisions of "Video display"
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− | The term '''video display''' does not have a strict, widely-accepted definition, but it generally refers to [[display]]s which can display images (which is now, of course, essentially all of them); and it sometime refers to those which accept an [[analog]] [[video]] input [[signal]], or whose interface to the rest of the system of which they are a part is such a signal. | + | The term '''video display''' does not have a strict, widely-accepted definition, but it generally refers to [[display]]s which can display images (which is now, of course, essentially all of them); and it sometime refers to those which accept an [[analog]] [[video]] input [[signal]], or whose interface to the rest of the system of which they are a part is such a signal. Originally, they all used [[cathode ray tube]]s for their displays. |
The signal may be either a [[raster]] type, or something else (e.g. the direct addressing often`produced by [[vector graphics]] systems). | The signal may be either a [[raster]] type, or something else (e.g. the direct addressing often`produced by [[vector graphics]] systems). | ||
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+ | [[Category: Device Basics]] |
Latest revision as of 14:05, 12 March 2021
The term video display does not have a strict, widely-accepted definition, but it generally refers to displays which can display images (which is now, of course, essentially all of them); and it sometime refers to those which accept an analog video input signal, or whose interface to the rest of the system of which they are a part is such a signal. Originally, they all used cathode ray tubes for their displays.
The signal may be either a raster type, or something else (e.g. the direct addressing often`produced by vector graphics systems).