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Widescreen signaling

 
Wikipedia: Widescreen signaling

In television technology, widescreen signaling (WSS) is a digital stream embedded in the TV signal describing qualities of the broadcast, in particular the intended aspect ratio of the image. This can be used by a widescreen TV to switch to the correct display mode.

The signal is placed in line 23 (PAL) and lines 20/283 (PAL-M and NTSC) and has 14 bits of information indicating:

Contents

B00 to B03 - Aspect Ratio

B00 B01 B02 B03 Aspect ratio Picture placement Active lines
0 0 0 1 4:3 Full 576
1 0 0 0 14:9 Letterbox Centre 504
0 1 0 0 14:9 Letterbox Top 504
1 1 0 1 16:9 Letterbox Centre 432
0 0 1 0 16:9 Letterbox Top 432
1 0 1 1 >16:9 Letterbox deeper than 16:9
0 1 1 1 14:9 Full-height 4:3, framed to be "14:9-safe" 576
1 1 1 0 16:9 Full-height 16:9 (anamorphic) 576

B04 to B07 - Enhanced Services

B04 Mode
0 Camera Mode
1 Movie Mode
B05 Mode
0 PAL Standard
1 Colour Plus
B06 Mode
0 No Vertical Helper
1 Vertical Helper Present
B07 Ghost Cancellation

B08 to B10 - Subtitles

B08 Mode
0 no subtitles
1 Teletext subtitles
B09 B10 Mode
0 0 No subtitles
1 0 Subtitles inside active image
0 1 Subtitles outside active image
1 1 Reserved

B11 to B13 - Others

B11 Mode
0 No surround sound information
1 Surround sound mode
B12 Mode
0 No copyright asserted or status unknown
1 Copyright asserted
B13 Mode
0 Copying not restricted
1 Copying restricted

See also

References

  • ETSI EN 300 294 "Television Systems: 625-Line Television Wide Screen Signaling (WSS)"

External links



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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Widescreen signaling" Read more