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You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses ...
A typical video tearing artifact (simulated image) Screen tearing [1] is a visual artifact in video display where a display device shows information from multiple frames in a single screen draw. [2] The artifact occurs when the video feed to the device is not synchronized with the display's refresh rate.
The beam tracing section describes a technique relevant to screen tearing, however this has nothing to do with beam tracing, and beam tracing has nothing to do with screan tearing. Leave the content of the section in place but change the title to whatever is the appropriate name for the technique (if it has such a name, otherwise call it "v ...
On displays with a fixed refresh rate, a frame can only be shown on the screen at specific intervals, evenly spaced apart. If a new frame is not ready when that interval arrives, then the old frame is held on screen until the next interval (stutter) or a mixture of the old frame and the completed part of the new frame is shown . Conversely, if ...
Vector displays, for instance, do not trace the entire screen, only the actual lines comprising the displayed image, so refresh speed may differ by the size and complexity of the image data. [2] For computer programs or telemetry , the term is sometimes applied to how frequently a datum is updated with a new external value from another source ...
Tearing is the act of breaking apart a material by force, without the aid of a cutting tool. A tear in a piece of paper , fabric , or some other similar object may be the result of the intentional effort with one's bare hands, or be accidental.