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ClearType
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==Display requirements== ClearType and allied technologies require display hardware with fixed pixels and subpixels. More precisely, the positions of the pixels and subpixels on the screen must be exactly known to the computer to which it is connected. This is the case for flat-panel displays, on which the positions of the pixels are permanently fixed by the design of the screen itself. Almost all flat panels have a perfectly rectangular array of square pixels, each of which contains three rectangular subpixels in the three primary colors, with the normal ordering being red, green, and blue, arranged in vertical bands. ClearType assumes this arrangement of pixels when rendering text. ClearType does not work properly with flat-panel displays that are operated at resolutions other than their βnativeβ resolutions, since only the native resolution corresponds exactly to the actual positions of pixels on the screen of the display. If a display does not have the type of fixed pixels that ClearType expects, text rendered with ClearType enabled actually looks worse than type rendered without it. Some flat panels have unusual pixel arrangements, with the colors in a different order, or with the subpixels positioned differently (in three horizontal bands, or in other ways). ClearType needs to be manually tuned for use with such displays (see below). ClearType will not work as intended on displays that have no fixed pixel positions, such as [[cathode-ray tube|CRT]] displays (which were still prevalent at the time of the release of Windows XP, which is why ClearType is disabled by default), however it will still have some antialiasing effect and may be preferable to some users as compared to non-anti-aliased type.<ref name=faq>{{cite web|title=ClearType FAQ|url=http://www.microsoft.com/typography/ClearTypeFAQ.mspx|website=Microsoft|access-date=19 July 2009|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150624222557/http://www.microsoft.com/typography/ClearTypeFAQ.mspx |archive-date=24 June 2015|date=19 July 2009}}</ref>
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