A VGA connector as it is commonly known (other names include RGB connector, D-sub 15, mini sub D15 and mini D15) is a three-row 15 pin DE-15. There are four versions: original and DDC2 pinouts, the far older and less flexible DE-9 connector, and a Mini-VGA used for laptops. The common 15-pin VGA connector found on most video cards, computer monitors, and other devices, is almost universally called "HD-15". HD stands for "high-density", which distinguishes it from connectors having the same form factor but only 2 rows of pins. However, this connector is often incorrectly referred to as a DB-15 or HDB-15.citation needed "VGA connectors" and their associated cabling are always used solely to carry analog component RGBHV (red - green - blue - horizontal sync - vertical sync) video signals along with DDC2 digital clock and data. Where size is a constraint (such as laptops) a mini-VGA port can sometimes be found in place of the full-sized VGA connector Disabling DDCOn Microsoft Windows (windows XP and above), there is no software provided option to disable plug and play monitor detection.citation needed This causes problems with computer/monitor switching applications and causes computer games to select display resolutions higher than the monitor is physically capable of displaying resulting in a garbled display. In these circumstances, it may be necessary to remove pin 12 from the monitor VGA cable, to disable plug and play monitor detection. This allows display resolution to be selected manually and not overridden when the display adapter is removed and reinserted or the KVM switch is operated. The automatic plug-and-play monitor detection under Windows operating systems can be overridden in the video card's control panel when the appropriate third-party driver is installed. See also
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