A friend of mine bought it on day 1 and it seemed to run fine on his ultrawide (32:10)they are going to add 32:9 Ultrawide support.
A friend of mine bought it on day 1 and it seemed to run fine on his ultrawide (32:10)they are going to add 32:9 Ultrawide support.
first time I heard about that aspect ratio. Which monitor does your friend have?A friend of mine bought it on day 1 and it seemed to run fine on his ultrawide (32:10)
3840 / 1200 = 3.2View attachment 9596
Have also heard it called a 29:9 aspect ratio monitor I dont know which aspect ratio is correct
thanks for the explanation. I have a question. Where does the 10 come from? Applying your numbers to 3840x1080 I get:3840 / 1200 = 3.2
3.2 x 10 = 32
3.2 x 9 = 28.8
So 32:10 is accurate. Or 16:5.
Well I was merely testing with 10 and 9 to see whether they are accurate because 32:10 and 29:9 had been mentioned.I have a question. Where does the 10 come from?
I'm simplifying by factors each time. Firstly I recognise they are both in the 10x table, so divide both by 10. Then they are clearly in the 3x table so I divide both number by 3. Keep going until you have the simplest ratio. A resolution of 700 x 280 would have an aspect ratio of:if I take your example of 3840 x 1200 and follow the same steps
3840 : 1200
384 : 120 Divided both numbers by 10 (why 10?)
96 : 30 Divided both numbers by 4 (why have you switched from 10 to 4?)
32 : 10 Divided both numbers by 3 (now youve switched from 4 to 3 why?)
16 : 5 Divided both numbers by 2 (now it's a 2)
so the formula to calculate aspect ratios is divide both numbers by 120 am I wrong ???
Why its those numbers (10,4,3) I don't know
Precisely.What your basically saying is this
To calculate an aspect ratio as W:H, divide your width and your height by their greatest common factor (GCF), and write it as W:H,
maybe but thats not always a trivial thing to doPrecisely
That would be the aspect ratio.maybe but thats not always a trivial thing to do
especially if I give a you resolution made of 2 prime numbers