VGA text mode was introduced in 1987 by IBM as part of the
VGA standard for its
IBM PS/2 computers.
Its use on
IBM PC compatibles was widespread through the 1990s and persists today for some applications on modern computers.
The main features of VGA text mode are colored (programmable 16 color
palette
Palette may refer to:
* Cosmetic palette, an archaeological form
* Palette, another name for a color scheme
* Palette (painting), a wooden board used for mixing colors for a painting
** Palette knife, an implement for painting
* Palette (company), ...
) characters and their background, blinking, various shapes of the
cursor (block/underline/hidden static/blinking), and loadable fonts (with various glyph sizes).
The
Linux console traditionally uses hardware VGA text modes,
and the
Win32 console environment has an ability to switch the screen to text mode for some text window sizes.
Data arrangement
Text buffer
Each screen character is represented by two
bytes aligned as a 16-bit word accessible by the CPU in a single operation. The lower, or character, byte is the actual code point for the current character set, and the higher, or attribute, byte is a
bit field used to select various video attributes such as color, blinking, character set, and so forth.
This byte-pair scheme is among the features that the VGA inherited from the
EGA
Ega or EGA may refer to:
Military
* East German Army, the common western name for the National People's Army
* Eagle, Globe, and Anchor, the emblem of the United States Marine Corps
People
* Aega (mayor of the palace), 7th-century noble of Neus ...
,
CGA, and ultimately from the
MDA.
# Depending on the mode setup, attribute bit 7 may be either the blink bit or the fourth background color bit (which allows all 16 colors to be used as background colours).
# Attribute bit 3 (foreground intensity) also selects between fonts A and B (see
below
Below may refer to:
*Earth
*Ground (disambiguation)
*Soil
*Floor
*Bottom (disambiguation)
Bottom may refer to:
Anatomy and sex
* Bottom (BDSM), the partner in a BDSM who takes the passive, receiving, or obedient role, to that of the top or ...
). Therefore, if these fonts are not the same, this bit is simultaneously an additional code point bit.
# Attribute bit 0 also enables underline, if certain other attribute bits are set to zero (see
below
Below may refer to:
*Earth
*Ground (disambiguation)
*Soil
*Floor
*Bottom (disambiguation)
Bottom may refer to:
Anatomy and sex
* Bottom (BDSM), the partner in a BDSM who takes the passive, receiving, or obedient role, to that of the top or ...
).
Colors are assigned in the same way as in 4-bit indexed color graphic modes (see
VGA color palette).
VGA modes have no need for the MDA's reverse and bright attributes because foreground and background colors can be set explicitly.
Underline
The VGA hardware has the ability to enable an
underline on any character that has attribute bit 0 set. However, since this is an MDA-compatible feature,
the attribute bits not used by the MDA must be set to zero or the underline will not be shown.
This means that only bits 3 (intensity) and 7 (blink) can be set concurrently with bit 0 (underline).
[ "Table 6. Sample cursor shapes, Base video port address, Internal mode bits, Screen attribute bit 7 role, Byte for internal mode register at port 3D8h (CGA), 3B8h (MDA) and virtual (EGA/VGA)"] With the default VGA palette, setting bit 0 to enable underline will also change the text colour to blue. This means text in only two colors can be underlined (5555FF and 0000AA with the default palette).
Despite all this, the underline is not normally visible in color modes, as the location of the underline defaults to a scanline below the character glyph, rendering it invisible.
If the underline location is set to a visible scanline (as it is by default when switching to an MDA-compatible monochrome text mode), then the underline will appear.
Fonts
Screen fonts used in EGA and VGA are
monospace raster fonts containing 256 glyphs. All glyphs in a font are the same size, but this size can be changed. Typically, glyphs are 8 dots wide and 8–16 dots high, however the height can be any value up to a maximum of 32. Each row of a glyph is coded in an
8-bit byte, with high bits to the left of the glyph and low bits to the right. Along with several hardware-dependent fonts stored in the adapter's
ROM, the text mode offers 8
loadable fonts. Two active font pointers (font A and font B) select two of the available fonts, although they usually point to the same font. When they each point to different fonts, attribute bit 3 (see
above) acts as a font selection bit instead of as a foreground color bit. On real VGA hardware, this overrides the bit's use for color selection, but on many clones and emulators, the color selection remains — meaning one font is displayed as normal intensity, and the other as high-intensity. This error can be overcome by changing the palette registers to contain two copies of an 8-color palette.
There are modes with a character box width of 9 dots (e.g. the default 80×25 mode), however the 9th column is used for spacing between characters, so the content cannot be changed. It is always blank, and drawn with the current background colour.
An exception to this is in ''Line Graphics Enable'' mode, which causes code points
0xC0 to 0xDF inclusive
to have the 8th column repeated as the 9th. These code points cover those
box-drawing characters which must extend all the way to the right side of the glyph box. For this reason, placing letter-like characters in code points 0xC0–0xDF should be avoided. The box-drawing characters from 0xB0 to 0xBF are not extended, as they do not point to the right and so do not require extending.
Cursor
The shape of the cursor is restricted to a
rectangle
In Euclidean plane geometry, a rectangle is a quadrilateral with four right angles. It can also be defined as: an equiangular quadrilateral, since equiangular means that all of its angles are equal (360°/4 = 90°); or a parallelogram containi ...
the full width of the character box, and
filled with the foreground color of the character at the cursor's current location. Its height and position may be set to anywhere within a character box;.
The EGA and many VGA clones allowed a split-box cursor (appearing as two rectangles, one at the top of the character box and one at the bottom), by setting the end of the cursor before the start, however if this is done on the original VGA, the cursor is completely hidden instead.
The VGA standard does not provide a way to alter the blink rate,
although common workarounds involve hiding the cursor and using a normal character glyph to provide a so-called software cursor.
A
mouse
A mouse ( : mice) is a small rodent. Characteristically, mice are known to have a pointed snout, small rounded ears, a body-length scaly tail, and a high breeding rate. The best known mouse species is the common house mouse (''Mus musculus' ...
cursor in TUI (when implemented) is not usually the same thing as a hardware cursor, but a moving rectangle with altered background or a special glyph.
Some text-based interfaces, such as that of
Impulse Tracker, went to even greater lengths to provide a smoother and more graphic-looking mouse cursor. This was done by constantly re-generating character glyphs in real-time according to the cursor's on-screen position.
Access methods
There are generally two ways to access VGA text-mode for an application: through the
Video BIOS interface or by directly accessing video
RAM and I/O ports. The latter method is considerably faster, and allows quick reading of the text buffer, for which reason it is preferred for advanced TUI programs.
The VGA text buffer is located at physical memory address 0xB8000.
Since this address is usually used by
16-bit
16-bit microcomputers are microcomputers that use 16-bit microprocessors.
A 16-bit register can store 216 different values. The range of integer values that can be stored in 16 bits depends on the integer representation used. With the two mos ...
x86 processes operating in real-mode, it is also the first half of memory
segment 0xB800. The text buffer data can be read and written, and
bitwise operation
In computer programming, a bitwise operation operates on a bit string, a bit array or a binary numeral (considered as a bit string) at the level of its individual bits. It is a fast and simple action, basic to the higher-level arithmetic operati ...
s can be applied. A part of text buffer memory above the scope of the current mode is accessible, but is not shown.
The same physical addresses are used in
protected mode
In computing, protected mode, also called protected virtual address mode, is an operational mode of x86-compatible central processing units (CPUs). It allows system software to use features such as virtual memory, paging and safe multi-tasking d ...
. Applications may either have this part of memory mapped to their
address space
In computing, an address space defines a range of discrete addresses, each of which may correspond to a network host, peripheral device, disk sector, a memory cell or other logical or physical entity.
For software programs to save and retrieve st ...
or access it via the
operating system. When an application (on a modern
multitasking OS) does not have control over the
console, it accesses a part of system RAM instead of the actual text buffer.
For computers in the 1980s, very fast manipulation of the text buffer, with the hardware generating the individual pixels as fast as they could be displayed, was extremely useful for a fast UI. Even on relatively modern hardware, the
overhead of text mode emulation via hardware
APA (graphics) modes (in which the program generates individual pixels and stores them into the video buffer) may be noticeable.
Modes and timings
Video signal
From the monitor's side, there is no difference in input signal in a text mode and an
All Points Addressable (APA) mode of the same size. A text mode signal may have the same
timings as
VESA standard modes. The same registers are used on adapter's side to set up these parameters in a text mode as in APA modes. The text mode output signal is essentially the same as in graphic modes, but its source is a text buffer and character generator, not a
framebuffer as in APA.
PC common text modes
Depending on the graphics adapter used, a variety of text modes are available on
IBM PC compatible computers. They are listed on the table below:
VGA and compatible cards support MDA, CGA and EGA modes. All colored modes have the same design of text attributes. MDA modes have some specific features (see
above) — a text could be emphasized with bright, underline, reverse and blinking attributes.
The most common text mode used in
DOS environments and
initial Windows consoles is the default 80 columns by 25 rows, or ''80×25'', with 16 colors and 8×16 pixels large characters. VGA cards always have a built-in font of this size whereas other sizes may require downloading a differently sized font.
This mode was available on practically all
IBM and compatible personal computers.
Linux kernel 2.6 and later assumes modes ''from 0000h to 00FFh'' as standard (hexadecimal), if VGA BIOS supports, and it understands them as increased by 0x0100. Same for VESA BIOS modes ''from 0100h to 07FFh'' (Linux increases them by 0x0100). Modes ''from 0900h to 09FFh'' are Video7 special modes, (Usually 0940h=80×43, 0941h=132×25, 0942h=132×44, 0943h=80×60, 0944h=100×60, 0945h=132×28 for the standard Video7 BIOS).
[Official Linux documentation. 1995-1999 Martin Mares. Video Mode Selection Support](_blank)
/ref> Linux 2.x allows to check supported video resolutions by kernel argument "vga=ask" or "vga=".
Later versions of Linux allow specifying resolution by modes ''from 1000h to 7FFFh''. The code has a "0xHHWW" form where HH is a number of rows and WW is a number of columns. E.g., 1950h (0x1950) corresponds to a 80×25 mode, 2B84h (0x2b84) to ''132×43'' etc. (Linux 3.x and later allows to set resolution by "video=:x", but it is for video framebuffer graphical mode.)
Two other VGA text modes, ''80×40'' and ''80×50'', exist but are less common. Windows NT 4.0 displayed its system messages during the boot process in 80×50 text mode.
Character sizes and graphical resolutions for the extended VESA-compatible Super VGA text modes are ''manufacturer's dependent''. Some cards (e.g. S3) supported custom very large text modes, like 132×43 and 132×25. Like as in graphic modes, graphic adapters of 2000s commonly are capable to set up an arbitrarily-sized text mode (in reasonable limits) instead of choosing its parameters from some list.
SVGATextMode
On Linux and DOS systems with so named SVGA cards, a program called SVGATextMode can be used to set up better looking text modes than EGA and VGA standard ones. This is particularly useful for large (≥ 17") monitors, where the normal 80×25 VGA text mode's 720×400 pixel resolution is far lower than a typical graphics mode would be. SVGATextMode allows setting of the pixel clock and higher refresh rate, larger font size, cursor size, etc., and allows a better use of the potential of a video card and monitor. In non-Windows systems, the use of SVGATextMode (or alternative options such as the Linux framebuffer) to obtain a sharp text is critical for LCD monitors of 1280×1024
A display resolution standard is a commonly used width and height dimension (display resolution) of an electronic visual display device, measured in pixels. This information is used for electronic devices such as a computer monitor. Certain co ...
(or higher resolution) because none of so named standard text modes fits to this matrix size. SVGATextMode also allows a fine tuning of video signal timings.
Despite the name of this program, only a few of its supported modes conform to SVGA (i.e. VESA) standards.
General restrictions
VGA text mode has some hardware-imposed limitations. Because these are too restrictive for modern (post 2000) applications, the hardware text mode on VGA compatible video adapters only has a limited use.
* 8 colors may be used by font A and other 8 colors by font B; so, if font A ≠ font B (512 characters mode), then the palette should be halved and a text may effectively use only 8 colors.
** Normally, first 8 colors of the same palette. If blink is disabled, then all 16 colors are available for background.
See also
* General article about '' text mode'' of computer display
References
{{DEFAULTSORT:Vga Compatible Text Mode
Text user interface
IBM PC compatibles
DOS on IBM PC compatibles