- XGA
XGA, the Extended Graphics Array, is an IBM display standard introduced in
1990 . Today, it is the most common appellation of the 1024 × 768pixel sdisplay resolution , but the official definition is broader than that. It was not a new and improved replacement forSuper VGA , but rather became one particular subset of the broad range of capabilities covered under the "Super VGA" umbrella.The initial version of XGA expanded upon IBM's VGA, adding support for two resolutions:
* 800 × 600 pixels with high color (16 bits per pixel, i.e. 65,536 colors).
* 1024 × 768 pixels with a palette of 256 colors (8 bits per pixel)Like its predecessor (the IBM
8514 ), XGA offered fixed function hardware acceleration to offload processing of 2D drawing tasks. XGA and 8514 could offload line-draw, bitmap-copy (bitblt ), and color-fill operations from the host CPU. XGA's acceleration was faster than 8514's, and more comprehensive in that it supported more drawing primitives and XGA's 16 bits per pixel (65,536 color) display-mode.XGA-2 added true color mode for 640×480, 1024×768 support for high color and higher
refresh rate s, and improved accelerator performance. All XGA modes have a4:3 aspect ratio rounded to 8 pixels.XGA should not be confused with
VESA 's EVGA (Extended Video Graphics Array) which was released at a similar time.Clone hardware
XGA hardware was not cloned as extensively as VGA hardware. Nevertheless, at least one graphics company made several XGA-compatible chips, the IIT AGX.
Comparison chart
See also
*
Wide XGA References
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