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if the images on your monitor are at high quality
what is the display resolution for a CGA monitor?
The resolution of a monitor is governed by the number of pixels on the screen.
Yes and no. A monitor can support several different screen resolutions. A CRT monitor can technically support any screen resolution sent to it, although the screen may be unreadable at extremely high resolutions. An LCD monitor supports a strict number of resolutions, but almost always more than one. The resolution that your screen actually uses (or tries to use) is specified by the video card, not the monitor. So purchasing a high-definition monitor won't do you any good if your video card is only capable of displaying 1024x768.
the best resolution of a monitor is the maximum it can handle, i.e 1920x1080 would be best on a hdtv or a monitor which has its maximum of 1920x1080.
The native resolution, which is the actual (and fixed) number of pixels built into the monitor.
Yes, the number of pixels on a monitor is known as its resolution.
You could tell because low resolution makes for a pixelated picture, and high resolution settings, you cannot tell.
The maximum resolution varies upon the monitor and what technology it has. The typical resolution for a 17 inch monitor would be 1280 pixels x 1024 pixels.
The most likely possibility is that your monitor might not support that particular resolution. Some monitors can be finicky about the resolution they support. Furthermore, if your monitor is an LCD monitor, you might not actually want it to be at 1366x768 if that is not the monitor's native resolution. LCDs are designed to look best at their native resolution.
They are higher resolution.
there know as clarity or sharpness but difinde by the pixles or contrast