Site Navigation
Categories:
Computer graphics data structures
Image processing
Digital geometry
Display technology
All articles with unsourced statements
Articles with unsourced statements since June 2008

Summary Of: Pixels

in which the individual pixels are rendered as little squares and can easily be seen... in which the individual pixels are rendered as little squares and can easily be seen... in which the individual pixels are rendered as little squares and can easily be seen... A photograph of pixels on a laptop... A photograph of pixels on a laptop... A photograph of pixels on a laptop... Pixels are normally arranged in a regular 2... we can speak of printed pixels in a page... or pixels carried by electronic signals... or pixels on a display device... or pixels in a digital camera... We can also speak of pixels in the abstract... in particular when using pixels as a measure of resolution... The more pixels used to represent an image... The number of pixels in an image is sometimes called the... which has 640 pixels from side to side and 480 from top to bottom... an image composed of pixels is known as a... pixels are normally arranged in a... Other arrangements of pixels are also possible... Pixels on computer monitors are normally... pixels in other systems are often... Computers can use pixels to display an image... also use pixels to display an image... pixels can be ignored... color pixels being treated as the smallest addressable imaging element... pixels can be included in rendering calculations... term used not only for the number of pixels in an image...

Encyclodia Page On: Pixels

These Are Links To Other Documents
Pixel (disambiguation) | This example shows an image with a portion greatly enlarged, in which the individual pixels are rendered as little squares and can easily be seen. | A photograph of pixels on a laptop's LCD screen | | LCD | digital imaging | sample | intensity | red, green, and blue | cyan, magenta, yellow, and black | voxel | citation needed | texel | Frederic C. Billingsley | JPL | Variety | Paul Nipkow | the original PC | Texel | Lux | voxel | Surfels | A pixel does not need to be rendered as a small square.  This image shows alternative ways of reconstructing an image from a set of pixel values, using dots, lines, or smooth filtering. | dots | dots per inch | pixels per inch | resolution | digital camera | VGA | JPEG | correspondence | bitmapped image | raster image | television scanning | halftone | regular two dimensional grid | kernel | Text rendered using Cleartype | LCD screens | Cleartype | Bayer filter | clipmap | support | Nyquist limit | digital video | aspect ratios | anamorphic widescreen | CCIR 601 | GUI | video card | LCD | triads | CRT | resample | Color depth | Highcolor | Truecolor | Highcolor | opacity | Phosphor dots in a color CRT display bear no relation to pixels or subpixels | | Phosphor | Pixel geometry of various CRT and LCD displays. | | Pixel geometry | color | LCDs | digital camera | image sensors | Bayer filter | subpixel rendering | pixel geometry | CRT | image sensor | digital cameras | digital displays | charge-coupled device | complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor | image sensors | Bayer filter | demosaicing | Foveon X3 sensor | display resolution | Display standards comparison | | CGA | EGA | VGA | SVGA | XGA | SXGA | UXGA | Computer display standard | Image resolution | Raster scan | Vector graphics | Rasterisation | Pixel art | Pixel art scaling algorithms | Gigapixel image | Pixel advertising | Intrapixel and Interpixel processing | Pixel overdrive | Pixel aspect ratio | ISBN 0-7506-4331-5 | Addison-Wesley | ISBN 0-201-12110-7 | Addison-Wesley | ISBN 0-201-12110-7 | The New York Times | April 2 | 1995 | April 7 | 2008 | ISBN 1579906893 | ISBN 1929685653 | 2008 | 05-09 | 2008 | 05-09 | ISBN 3833414898 | Computer History Museum | Categories | Computer graphics data structures | Image processing | Digital geometry | Display technology | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since June 2008 |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Pixels".