layout | title | date | permalink |
---|---|---|---|
post |
The Sharpening |
2016-05-04 01:00:00 -0700 |
/blog/2016/05/04/ |
This was the week of The Sharpening.
A while back, I updated most of the machines to use higher-resolution "screens". For example, a typical EGA video configuration now specifies a screenWidth of 1280 and screenHeight of 700, dimensions which are exactly twice the standard EGA resolution.
That change had no effect on the machine's operation, but it did improve the machine's appearance, because most people are using much higher resolution monitors today, so by using a higher-resolution "screen" (canvas), less interpolation is happening when a machine's screen image is scaled up to fill your browser window.
The amount of scaling also depends on whether the machine allows itself to be stretched to fill the browser window. For example, this machine (used by the EGA Machine Array Demo) is limited to an overall width of 680 pixels, no matter how large you make your browser window:
<machine id="ibm5160" class="pc" border="1" width="680px" float="left" background="#FAEBD7">
but most machines don't specify a (maximum) overall width, so their screen canvas is allowed to stretch far beyond the initial screenWidth and screenHeight, thanks to some additional CSS settings.
Larger screens mean less interpolation, which is a good thing if you want the screens to look less "fuzzy." However, interpolation also happens at a deeper level, because internally, PCjs uses two canvases to move pixels from the machine's frame buffer to your browser: the screen canvas, which I've already discussed, and another canvas called the buffer canvas, where changes to the machine's frame buffer are, um, buffered.
The buffer canvas has the same dimensions as the machine's frame buffer, whereas the screen canvas has generally higher dimensions (as explained above), which your browser may then be stretching to even higher dimensions, depending on your monitor resolution and browser size.
The differential between the buffer canvas and screen canvas is where additional interpolation (fuzziness) creeps in. That is where The Sharpening now occurs.
All the browsers I've tested so far (Chrome, Firefox, and Safari) support a Canvas Context property named imageSmoothingEnabled, which eliminates much of the fuzziness that would occur when copying pixels from the lower-resolution buffer canvas to the higher-resolution screen canvas.
So I've added a new Video property named smoothing that can be set to "true" or "false", and I've set it to "false" for most machines in the project. If smoothing is not set, your browser continues to use its default interpolation method.
{% include gallery-begin.html %} {% include gallery-image.html src="/blog/images/si1978-fuzzier.png" width="339" height="388" title="Space Invaders (Fuzzier)" link="/devices/pc8080/machine/invaders/?smoothing=true" %} {% include gallery-image.html src="/blog/images/si1978-sharper.png" width="339" height="388" title="Space Invaders (Sharper)" link="/devices/pc8080/machine/invaders/?smoothing=false" %} {% include gallery-end.html %}
For some people, this might be a matter of taste, because less fuzziness necessarily means more pixelation (ie, you can see individual pixels more clearly), which becomes more noticeable when switching a machine Full Screen. So I've also added a URL smoothing parameter you can use to override a machine's default setting; eg:
https://www.pcjs.org/devices/pc8080/machine/invaders/?smoothing=true
See for yourself, by clicking on each of the Space Invaders images above and then clicking the Full Screen button; both images link to the same machine, but left one enables image smoothing, while the right one does not.
The smoothing property joins another recent Video property, aspect, that was added in a release last month.
To recap, aspect ratio is display width divided by display height, but the choice of aspect ratio is complicated by the fact that none of the early IBM video card/monitor combinations (with the exception of the VGA) displayed square pixels, and (with the exception of the MDA) they could display text and graphics at a variety of resolutions.
So, for those users who either 1) don't like the aspect ratios that PCjs has chosen, or 2) just want to squeeze or stretch a machine's screen a bit more, there is now an aspect parameter you can append to the URL of any page containing one or more PCjs machines.
For example:
https://www.pcjs.org/disks/pcx86/dos/ibm/1.00/?aspect=2.0
will modify the height of the machine's screen to conform to the requested aspect ratio of 2.0. The screen should still be responsive to any browser resizing while still retaining that aspect ratio.
That's all for now. Work continues on the new PC8080 emulator and the Space Invaders test machine. More on that later, when it's finished.
Until then, May the 4th be with you!
@jeffpar
May 4, 2016