Although the common standard prefixes
super and
ultra do not indicate specific modifiers to base standard resolutions, several others do: ;Quarter (Q or q) :A quarter of the base resolution. E.g.
QVGA, a term for a resolution, half the width and height of VGA, hence the quarter total resolution. The "Q" prefix usually indicates "Quad" (4 times as many, not 1/4 times as many) in higher resolutions, and sometimes "q" is used instead of "Q" to specify
quarter (by analogy with
SI prefixes m/M), but this usage is not consistent. ;Wide (W) :The base resolution increased by increasing the width and keeping the height constant, for square or near-square pixels on a widescreen display, usually with an aspect ratio of either 16:9 (adding an extra 1/3rd width vs a standard 4:3 display) or 16:10 (adding an extra 1/5th). However, it is sometimes used to denote a resolution that would have roughly the same total pixel count as this, but in a different aspect and sharing neither the horizontal OR vertical resolution—typically for a 16:10 resolution which is narrower but taller than the 16:9 option, and therefore larger in both dimensions than the base standard (e.g., compare and , both commonly labelled as WXGA, vs the base XGA). ;Quad(ruple) (Q) :Four times as many pixels compared to the base resolution, i.e. twice the horizontal and vertical resolution respectively. ;Hex(adecatuple) (H) :Sixteen times as many pixels compared to the base resolution, i.e. four times the horizontal and vertical resolutions respectively. ;Super (S), eXtended (X), Plus (+) and/or Ultra (U) :Vaguer terms denoting successive incremental steps up the resolution ladder from some comparative, more established base, usually somewhat less severe a jump than quartering or Quadrupling—typically less than doubling, and sometimes not even as much of a change as making a "wide" version; for example SVGA ( vs ), SXGA ( vs ), SXGA+ ( vs ) and UXGA ( vs - or more fittingly, vs the of SXGA, the conceptual "next step down" at the time of UXGA's inception, or the of SXGA+). Given the use of "X" in "XGA", it is not often used as an additional modifier (e.g. there is no such thing as XVGA except as an alternative designation for SXGA) unless its meaning would be unambiguous. These prefixes are also often combined, as in
WQXGA or
WHUXGA, with levels of stacking not hindered by the same consideration towards readability as the decline of the added "X" - especially as there is not even a defined hierarchy or value for S/X/U/+ modifiers. ==See also==