'=========================================================================== ' Subject: MILLION-COLOR PALETTE Date: 12/85 (00:00) ' Author: John & Jeff Klein Code: TEXT ' Origin: Rolf@ice.prima.ruhr.de Packet: FAQS.ABC '=========================================================================== Million-Color Palette for IBM PC (COMPUTE! Magazine December 1985 by John and Jeff Klein) No longer is your PC restricted to a palette of 16 colors and an inability to display them all in higher resolutions. The secret is a combination of a techniques called tile painting and the trick of fooling a TV or composite monitor into displaying new solid colors. Graphics images are stored differently in the computer's memory for each different graphics mode or screen. The color of each pixel is stored in a section of memory. This video memory is arranged by its location or coordinates on the screen. The image you see on the screen, therefore, is a copy of the contents of video memory. To figure out how many pixels can be represented in a byte of memory, remember that a byte is made up of 8 bits. Simply divide the amount of memory required for a certain screen mode by the number of pixels on the screen. The memory requirements for each screen mode are: Screen # of Memory Mode Resolution Colors per Screen Pixels/Byte Bits/Pixel 1 320 x 200 4 16K 4 2 2 620 x 200 2 16K 8 1 Remember that RGB stands for the three primary colors of light: red, green and blue. All colors can be made by mixing these three primary colors. That's why RGB monitors, color TVs and composite color monitors have three electron guns, all of which are controlled by the computer to produce color. If none of the guns is lighting a pixel, the pixel appears black. Colors are represented in memory by arranging bits to denote which electron guns should be turned on or off when lighting the corresponding pixel. For instance, if a certain pixel is supposed to be blue, the group of bits representing that pixel in memory shows the blue gun is on and the others off. All the possible combinations of the three electron guns account for eight colors. To get eight more colors, the intensity, also called luminance, is varied by mixing a little white with the first eight colors. That's why the IBM PC has a total of 16 color variations -- two shades each of eight colors. The 16 colors are represented by the following bit combinations. Bits Luminance Red Green Blue Color 0 0 0 0 Black 0 0 0 1 Blue 0 0 1 0 Green 0 0 1 1 Cyan 0 1 0 0 Red 0 1 0 1 Magenta 0 1 1 0 Brown 0 1 1 1 Light Gray 1 0 0 0 Dark Gray 1 0 0 1 Light Blue 1 0 1 0 Light Green 1 0 1 1 Light Cyan 1 1 0 0 Pink 1 1 0 1 Light Magenta 1 1 1 0 Yellow 1 1 1 1 White Remember that each bit turns an electron gun either on or off. Notice how many bits its takes to represent all the possible combinations. It takes four bits, or half a byte (sometimes called nybble) to represent all 16 colors. So all screen modes which use four bits to represent a pixel are 16-color modes. Only four-color combinations are possible with two bits, and only two combinations are possible with one bit. That's why some screen modes can display only four or two colors at a time. Once you're familiar with how pixels are represented in video memory, the technique of tile painting is easy to understand. Tile painting uses the PAINT command to fill the bytes of screen memory with certain patterns of ones and zeros. The pattern is programmable, and it represents what is displayed on the TV or monitor. Instead of painting with the actual color, you paint with the bit pattern of the color. By using bit patterns, you can actually paint with more than one color around some specified border color: PAINT (x,y),CHR$(bit pattern) + CHR$(bit pattern) + ...,boundary color The bit pattern consists of eight bits, so its decimal equivalent can range from 0 to 255 (integers only). The bit pattern must represent the colors of the pixels per byte of the screen mode you're using. The color patterns are put in memory next to each other as vertical lines on the screen. This example paints SCREEN 1 with vertical bands of blue and green lines: 10 SCREEN 1:CLS 20 PAINT (1,1),CHR$(102),3 The reason why the lines are blue and green can be seen when the number 102 is expressed in binary, revealing the bit pattern: 102 = 01100110 Decimal 102 is derived from this binary number by: Value for each digit 128 64 32 16 8 4 2 1 01 = 0001 = blue 10 = 0010 = green Binary 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 128 * 0 = 0 64 * 1 = 64 32 * 1 = 32 16 * 0 = 0 8 * 0 = 0 4 * 1 = 4 2 * 1 = 2 1 * 0 = 0 102 SCREEN 1 stores four pixels per byte, so the pattern works out to: 01 10 01 10 blue green blue green Here's where things get tricky. If the computer is plugged into a color TV or composite color monitor (not an RGB monitor), you won't see the blue and green vertical lines that are supposed to be there. Instead, you'll see a solid bar of color that's sort of blue. And the blue is not one of the normal 16 colors available. It is a new color -- one of the 16 shades that can be created on SCREEN 1 of the PC. What's happening is something called artifacting. This effect takes advantage of the limited resolution of TVs and composite color monitors. When two very small pixels are placed next to each other on these screens, there isn't enough resolution to display them properly. As a result, the pixels tend to blend together and create a false color -- an artifact color. The color wouldn't be visible if the screen had more resolution. RGB monitors have enough resolution to display the pixels as they're supposed to appear. If the binary pattern 10 01 10 01 is used in the above example instead of 01 10 01 10, the ahsde is slightly different -- blue-green- blue-green does not appear the same as green-blue-green-blue on a color TV or composite monitor. They mix differently to create an entirely new shade of blue-green. The PC has only two graphics modes, SCREEN 1 and SCREEN 2. Tile painting produces only 16 colors in SCREEN 1 and five shades of gray in SCREEN 2. In SCREEN 1, tile painting lets us display up to 16 hues simultaneously. Program 1 displays 16 shades. Vertical bands with four colors don't blend in this mode, so somehow bands of two must be painted. The secret is in line 40. Since there are four pixels per byte, the last half of the byte has to be reflected in the first half. This technique insures that only two colors are in each band of four. The first half is the same as the last half, so the first band of two will be the same as the last band of two. Tile painting doesn't work correctly in SCREEN 2, high resolution with two colors, because this screen is always in black and white. However, you can get five shades of gray, as shown in Program 2. Solid lines form the brightest white. Lines separated by two or three lines of black yield the next two shades. The middle gray can't be displayed when using the PAINT command, because it's not possible to create a bit pattern that represents two blacks and then a white. These bit patterns generate the various shades of gray: Binary Decimal Hex Shade color 1 = 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 = 256 = &HFF = White 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 = 85 = &H55 = Dull White (Not accessible) = Middle Gray 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 = 17 = &H11 = Dark Gray color 0 = 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 = 0 = &H00 = Black Program 3 provides a demo of tile painting in SCREEN 1. It fills the screen with circles, displaying up to 16 colors on the PC. Program 4, for the PC with an RGB monitor, demonstrates the usefulness of the many new colors in a fascinating experiment. It uses SCREEN 1 and tile painting, but in a different way than Program 3. Closely spaced vertical lines don't blend together on an RGB monitor, so the previous technique won't work. Program 4 uses the second part of the PAINT command. The first CHR$(bit pattern) controls the horizontal line above the second CHR$(bit pattern). Now the PAINT command can control the horizontal as well as the vertical lines, forming a checkerboard. Although the checkerboard blends the lines together to create new colors, the colors aren't as solid as those produced by vertical lines on a TV or composite monitor. Indeed, the effect won't look very pretty on a TV or composite monitor; it's passable on an RGB. To use the new colors in your own programs, choose one of the example programs. This table summarizes the programs and the number of color variations possible in each. Screen Max Colors per Display Program Mode Colors Screen Device 1 SCREEN 1 16 16 TV or CC 2 SCREEN 2 5 5 TV or CC 3 SCREEN 1 16 16 TV or CC 4 SCREEN 1 20 10 RGB Program 1: 10 SCREEN 1:CLS:KEY OFF:COLOR ,0 20 RANDOMIZE VAL(RIGHT$(TIME$,2)):Z=-1:A=INT(320/16):Y=0 30 FOR X=0 TO 15:Z=Z+1 40 LINE (X*A,0)-(X*A+A,200),3,B 50 IF Z<>0 THEN PAINT (X*A+1,1),CHR$(Z+Z*16),3 60 LINE (X*A,0)-(X*A+A,200),0,B 70 NEXT X Program 2: 10 SCREEN 2,1:CLS:KEY OFF 20 FOR X=1 TO 100:LINE (X,1)-(X,200),1:NEXT X 30 FOR X=101 TO 200 STEP 2:LINE (X,1)-(X,200),1:NEXT X 40 FOR X=201 TO 300 STEP 3:LINE (X,1)-(X,200),1:NEXT X 50 FOR X=301 TO 400 STEP 4:LINE (X,1)-(X,200),1:NEXT X 60 GOTO 60 Program 3: 10 SCREEN 1:CLS:KEY OFF:COLOR ,0 20 RANDOMIZE VAL(RIGHT$(TIME$,2)) 30 X=RND*320:Y=RND*200:R=RND*10+10:TILE=INT(RND*(15)+1) 40 CIRCLE (X,Y),R,3:PAINT (X,Y),CHR$(TILE+TILE*16),3:CIRCLE (X,Y),R,0 50 GOTO 20 Program 4: 10 SCREEN 1:CLS:KEY OFF:COLOR ,0 20 RANDOMIZE VAL(RIGHT$(TIME$,2)):Z=-1:A=INT(320/16):Y=0:C=0 30 FOR X=0 TO 15:Z=Z+1 40 LINE (X*A,0)-(X*A+A,200),3,B:Y=Z+Z*16:Q=Y*4:R=INT(Q/256):Q=Q-R*256+R 50 IF Z<>0 THEN PAINT (X*A+1,1),CHR$(Y)+CHR$(Q),3 60 LINE (X*A,0)-(X*A+A,200),0,B 70 NEXT X