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Widescreen: Difference between revisions

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! Target aspect ratio !! Numerical aspect ratio !! SNES internal resolution !! Numerical pixel aspect ratio !! Notes
! DAR (display aspect ratio) !! Numerical DAR !! SNES internal resolution !! Numerical PAR (pixel aspect ratio) !! Notes
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| 8:7 || 1.1428 || 256x224 || 1.0000 || Most of the emulators doesn't apply pixel aspect ratio (leaves as 1:1). Keep this value as reference.
| 8:7 || 1.1428 || 256x224 || 1.0000 || Most of the emulators doesn't apply pixel aspect ratio (leaves as 1:1). Keep this value as reference.

Revision as of 09:57, 11 April 2021

Screen

The currently studied aspect ratios for SNES widescreen are the following:

  1. 16:9 widescreen. There's an additional 48 columns to the left and right side of the screen. Resolution is 352x224, stretched to simulate the 8:7 pixel aspect ratio.
  2. 21:9 widescreen (actually 64:27). There's an additional 96 columns to the left and right side of the screen. Resolution is 448x224, stretched to simulate the 8:7 pixel aspect ratio.
  3. 2:1 widescreen. There's an additional 64 columns to the left and right side of the screen. Resolution is 384x224, stretched to simulate the 8:7 pixel aspect ratio.

Reference table

DAR (display aspect ratio) Numerical DAR SNES internal resolution Numerical PAR (pixel aspect ratio) Notes
8:7 1.1428 256x224 1.0000 Most of the emulators doesn't apply pixel aspect ratio (leaves as 1:1). Keep this value as reference.
4:3 1.3333 256x224 1.1667 Real hardware reference. Certain TVs pixel aspect ratio are 1.1428 instead of 1.1667, due of signal interpretation differences.
16:9 1.7778 352x224 1.1313 N/A
21:9 2.3703 448x224 1.1851 "21:9" is a marketing term. The real aspect ratio is 64:27 (used by the HDMI standard) and it's used as reference for this table.
2:1 2.0000 384x224 1.1667 N/A

Comparison with 4:3 standard

The 256x224 SNES screen is not 4:3, but rather 8:7. CRT screens usually stretches the image by multiplying the internal screen width by 8/7 or 7/6, depending on the TV model. 8/7 seems to be more common, while 7/6 gives an perfect 4:3 output, since 8:7 (screen aspect ratio) * 7/6 (pixel aspect ratio) = 4/3 (actual aspect ratio), while 8:7 (screen aspect ratio) * 8/7 (pixel aspect ratio) = 64:49 (more like 4.0000:3.0625). Use the above reference table for clarification.

Important note

All values consider the NTSC signal as reference. PAL equivalence calculations are not yet available.

Objects

Since OAM sprite width is 9-bit wide, allowing values between -256 to +255, the internal range is adjusted in a manner the negative range also wraps positively. You can assume the values to range between -128 and +384, which are mapped that way: if unsigned position is greater than or equal to 384, subtract 512 from it. Else, keep value as is.

Sprites that already knows how to handle the left screen boundary (position -1 to -16) can be easily adapted to work with the widescreen range. Otherwise, it's recommended to port the relative screen position to use 16-bit values.

In addition, it doesn't break other emulators, since the additional visible area is implicitly invisible on the SNES hardware specification.

Windowing

Assume that the windowing internal size is 512 lines long instead of 256 lines long. If you take the windowing calculations based from this perspective, windowing HDMA will work regardless of the aspect ratio being currently used (16:9, 21:9, etc.)

Emulator

https://github.com/DerKoun/bsnes-hd

https://www.reddit.com/r/emulation/comments/bmc9t9/bsneshd_beta_5_bsnes_1073_formally_hd_mode_7_mod/