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生日快乐。
这个设置吧,我是开着的,开着就行,不会影响什么。
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我不是特别了解这个东西,只知道极大多数情况下都用不上,开着也无所谓。具体情况还是让其它大佬解释吧。
关于反交错的一些信息:
Deinterlacing - Wikipedia
From Reddit:
You would only use de-interlacing to correct interlace artifacts on sources like DVD, 720i or 1080i. Interlacing is where half the screen is drawn on the first frame, and the second half is drawn on the next frame (every second line). That leads to a strange effect on areas of high motion.
Inverse Telecine is frame rate conversion from 24 fps to more typical frame rates used on a computer (30, 60, 120 for example). It works to eliminate stuttering during the conversion. You'd only need to use this if you're converting to or from 24 fps (film), i.e., if your source frame rate differs from the frame rate you're rendering to. And about this question:
so for gaming and watching streams/videos, it doesn't matter what option i choose? The performance/quality is unaffected?
The reply was:
For those use cases, these settings won't do anything. interlaced video is getting increasingly rare. Interlacing was used when video needed to have very low bandwidth for standard-definition and very early high-def televisions (through 2007 or so). The only real recent way to see interlaced is some broadcast TV stations are interlaced 1080i if you view TV via over the air antenna.
原帖链接:What is "deinterlacing" and should i use "inverse telecine"? - Reddit
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