Tandy Graphics Adapter
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Tandy Graphics Adapter (TGA, also Tandy graphics) is a
computer display standard Computer display standards are a combination of aspect ratio, display size, display resolution, color depth, and refresh rate. They are associated with specific expansion cards, video connectors and monitors. History Various computer displa ...
for the
Tandy 1000 The Tandy 1000 is the first in a line of IBM PC workalike home computer systems produced by the Tandy Corporation for sale in its Radio Shack and Radio Shack Computer Center chains of stores. Overview In December 1983, an executive with Tandy ...
series of IBM PC compatibles, which has compatibility with the video subsystem of the
IBM PCjr The IBM PCjr (pronounced "PC junior") was a home computer produced and marketed by IBM from March 1984 to May 1985, intended as a lower-cost variant of the IBM PC with hardware capabilities better suited for video games, in order to compete mor ...
but became a standard in its own right.


PCjr graphics

The Tandy 1000 series began in 1984 as a clone of the
IBM PCjr The IBM PCjr (pronounced "PC junior") was a home computer produced and marketed by IBM from March 1984 to May 1985, intended as a lower-cost variant of the IBM PC with hardware capabilities better suited for video games, in order to compete mor ...
, offering support for existing PCjr software. As a result, its graphics subsystem is largely compatible. The PCjr, released in 1983, has a graphics subsystem built around IBM's Video Gate Array (not to be confused with the later
Video Graphics Array Video Graphics Array (VGA) is a video display controller and accompanying de facto graphics standard, first introduced with the IBM PS/2 line of computers in 1987, which became ubiquitous in the PC industry within three years. The term can n ...
) and an
MC6845 The Motorola 6845, or MC6845, is a display controller that was widely used in 8-bit computers during the 1980s. Originally intended for designs based on the Motorola 6800 CPU and given a related part number, it was more widely used alongsid ...
CRTC and extends on the capabilities of the
Color Graphics Adapter The Color Graphics Adapter (CGA), originally also called the ''Color/Graphics Adapter'' or ''IBM Color/Graphics Monitor Adapter'', introduced in 1981, was IBM's first color graphics card for the IBM PC and established a De facto standard, de fact ...
(CGA), increasing the number of colors in each screen mode. CGA's 2-color mode can be displayed with four colors, and its 4-color mode can be displayed with all 16 colors. Since the Tandy 1000 was much more successful than PCjr, their shared hardware capabilities became more associated with the Tandy brand than with IBM. While there is no specific name for the Tandy graphics subsystem (Tandy's documentation calls it the "Video System Logic"), common parlance referred to it as TGA. Where not otherwise stated, information in this article that describes the TGA also applies to the PCjr video subsystem. While EGA would eventually deliver a superset of TGA graphics on IBM compatibles, software written for TGA is not compatible with EGA cards.


Hardware design

TGA graphics are built into the motherboards of Tandy computers. The PCjr uses a custom monitor with a unique 18-pin plug, but an adapter (with the same DE-9 connector and pinout as IBM's CGA/EGA) can connect it to the IBM Color Display. The Tandy 1000 provides the DE-9 connector directly. The later Tandy 1000 SL and TL models offers an enhanced version of the TGA, still capable of displaying 16 colors but at an improved resolution of 640×200.


Output capabilities


Tandy Video I / PCjr

Tandy 1000 systems before the Tandy 1000 SL, and the PCjr, have this type of video. tp://ftp.oldskool.org/pub/tvdog/tandy1000/documents/1kfaq.txt II.B.5. What is this weird video Tandy has? Tandy 1000-series FAQ (Version 2.52 / October 25, 2005) It offers several CGA-compatible modes and enhanced modes. CGA compatible modes: * 320×200 in 4 colors from a 16 color ( 4-bit RGBI) hardware palette. Pixel aspect ratio of 1:1.2. * 640×200 in 2 colors from 16. Pixel aspect ratio of 1:2.4 * 40×25 with 8×8 pixel font text mode (effective resolution of 320×200) * 80×25 with 8×8 pixel font text mode (effective resolution of 640×200) Both text modes could themselves be set to display in monochrome, or in 16 colors. In addition to the CGA modes, it offers: * 160×200 with 16 colors (equivalent to the graphical quality of many contemporary 8-bit home computers and games consoles, using the same 16 KB memory size and machine bandwidth as the original CGA modes, and analogous to/somewhat able to share graphics assets with CGA's "composite color" mode whilst remaining displayable on RGB monitors) * 320×200 with 16 colors * 640×200 with 4 colors (from 16) Some games detect the Tandy hardware and display enhanced graphics in Tandy mode even when their CGA display mode is selected, while others offer the option to select "Tandy" graphics.


Tandy Video II or ETGA

Tandy 1000 SL-series, TL-series, and RL-series models have this type of video. It offers the same modes as Tandy Video I, plus one more non-CGA mode: *640×200 with 16 colors


Popularity

With built-in joystick ports, 16-color graphics and multichannel sound, the Tandy 1000 was considered the best platform for IBM PC-compatible games before the VGA era, and the combination of its graphics and sound became a de facto standard, "Tandy compatible". 28 of 66 games that ''
Computer Gaming World ''Computer Gaming World'' (CGW) was an American computer game magazine published between 1981 and 2006. One of the few magazines of the era to survive the video game crash of 1983, it was sold to Ziff Davis in 1993. It expanded greatly throug ...
'' tested in 1989 supported Tandy graphics.


Incompatibilities

The PCjr video and Tandy 1000 graphics subsystems are not identical. One difference is in the size of the video memory aperture at address 0xB8000. While the PCjr video hardware can use up to 32 KB of RAM for the video buffer, it emulates the CGA precisely by making only 16 KB of this available at address 0xB8000. Like the true CGA, the 16 KB of RAM at 0xB8000 is aliased at address 0xBC000. The Tandy hardware, in contrast, makes the full 32 KB of selected video RAM available at 0xB8000. This difference causes some software written for Tandy graphics not to work correctly on a PCjr, displaying images in 320×200 16-color or 640×200 with periodic black horizontal lines: a "venetian-blinds" effect. It is possible that software for the PCjr that relies on the memory wrap-around at address 0xBC000 will not work correctly on a Tandy 1000.


Technical details


Shared RAM

Unlike every other IBM-designed PC video standard, TGA uses some of the main system RAM as video RAM. The PCjr had 64 KB of built-in RAM on the mainboard, and an additional 64 KB can be installed via a special card that plugs into a dedicated slot on the PCjr mainboard.IBM PCjr Technical Reference This 64 KB or 128 KB of ''base RAM'' is special in that it is shared with the PCjr video subsystem. TGA video modes use either 16 KB or 32 KB of RAM each. Text modes uses 16 KB divided into 4 or 8 pages, for 80×25 or 40×25 text formats respectively. In graphical modes, the base 128 KB of RAM is divided into eight 16 KB banks. The PCjr can use any bank for video generation, in a video mode that uses 16 KB. In a mode that uses 32 KB, it can use any even bank concatenated with the next higher odd bank. The PCjr also can independently map any 16 KB bank of base RAM to address 0xB8000 for CPU access, for CGA compatibility. Apart from address 0xB8000, the CPU can access any bank at any time via its native address in the first 128 KB of the address space. The first bank overlaps the interrupt vector table of the x86 CPU and the data area used by the BIOS, so it is generally not usable for graphics. Using system memory has advantages: It saves the cost of dedicated video RAM, and the dynamic RAM is refreshed by the 6845 CRT controller as long as the video is running, so there is no need for separate DRAM refresh circuitry. In the
IBM PC XT The IBM Personal Computer XT (model 5160, often shortened to PC/XT) is the second computer in the IBM Personal Computer line, released on March 8, 1983. Except for the addition of a built-in hard drive and extra expansion slots, it is very simila ...
upon which the PCjr is based, DRAM refresh is performed by one channel of the 8237 DMA controller, triggered by one channel of the
8253 The Intel 8253 and 8254 are programmable interval timers (PITs), which perform timing and counting functions using three 16-bit counters. The 825x family was primarily designed for the Intel 8080/ 8085-processors, but were later used in x86 c ...
programmable timer, while in the PCjr the 8237 is eliminated and the timer channel is repurposed (to work around a complication of other cost-cutting in the keyboard interface). Up to almost 128 KB of RAM can be used for video (if software is mostly in ROM—e.g. on PCjr cartridges—or in RAM above the first 128 KB), and the displayed video banks can be switched instantaneously to implement double-buffering (or triple-buffering, or up to 7-fold buffering in 16 KB video modes) for smooth full-screen animation, something the CGA cannot do. The Tandy 1000 computers do not incorporate the PCjr's cost-cutting measures (most of them have an 8237 DMA controller), but for compatibility with PCjr video, they use the same RAM-sharing scheme.


Programmable palette

When operating in the CGA video modes which use 1 or 2 bits per pixel, TGA allows remapping of the 2 or 4 palette entries to any of the 16 colors in the CGA gamut via programmable palette control registers. This allows software to use the CGA modes without being constrained to the three hardwired palettes of the actual CGA. The following improvements in color choice are available in the CGA graphics modes: *320×200 in 4 colors: The three foreground colors can be freely chosen, in addition to the background color which could already be set on the CGA *640×200 in 2 colors: The background color can be freely chosen, rather than always being black, in addition to the foreground color which could already be set on the CGA. The palette mapping logic is always active, even in text modes, so it is possible to cause certain text to change in appearance (appear, disappear, cycle colors, etc.) just by changing the palette, without making any changes to the character attribute bytes in RAM. The PCjr/TGA programmable palette was carried over to the IBM EGA, where it was extended to 6-bit entries for 64 colors, and so on for the expanded palette of VGA.


See also

*
Plantronics Colorplus The Plantronics Colorplus is a graphics card for IBM PC computers, first sold in 1982. It is a superset of the then-current CGA standard, using the same monitor standard and providing the same pixel resolutions. It was produced by Frederick Ele ...
, a graphic board with similar capabilities *
List of 8-bit computer hardware palettes This is a list of notable 8-bit computer color palettes, and graphics, which were primarily manufactured from 1975 to 1985. Although some of them use RGB palettes, more commonly they have 4, 16 or more color palettes that are not bit nor level c ...
*
List of defunct graphics chips and card companies {{Unreferenced, date=June 2010 During the 1980s and 1990s a relatively large number of companies appeared selling primarily 2D graphics cards and later 3D. Most of those companies have subsequently disappeared, as the increasing complexity of GPUs ...


References

{{Computer display standard Computer display standards Graphics cards RadioShack Computer-related introductions in 1984