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Using a Retina display Learn about the Retina display built into your Mac. The pixel density of Retina displays is so high that your eyes can't detect individual pixels at a normal viewing distance.
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:. 16-inch MacBook Pro models introduced in 2019. Native resolution: 3072 x 1920 at 226 pixels per inch. Support for millions of colors. 15-inch MacBook Pro models introduced in 2012 or later, except the MacBook Pro (15-inch, Mid 2012). Native resolution: 2880 x 1800 at 220 pixels per inch. Support for millions of colors.
13-inch MacBook Pro models introduced in late 2012 or later. Native resolution: 2560 x 1600 at 227 pixels per inch. Support for millions of colors.introduced in 2018 or later. Native resolution: 2560 x 1600 at 227 pixels per inch. Support for millions of colors.introduced in 2015 or later. Native resolution: 2304 x 1440 at 226 pixels per inch. Support for millions of colors.:.
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27-inch iMac models introduced in 2014 or later. Native resolution: 5120 x 2880.
Models introduced in 2014 and 2015 support millions of colors, and models introduced in 2017 or later support one billion colors. 21.5-inch iMac models introduced in 2015 or later, except the iMac (21.5-inch, 2017) and iMac (21.5-inch, Late 2015). Native resolution: 4096 x 2304. The Retina model introduced in 2015 supports millions of colors, and models introduced in 2017 or later support one billion colors.All iMac Pro models. Native resolution: 5120 x 2880.
Support for one billion colors. If you're using an external display to, you can choose a preferred resolution for each display. To see additional resolutions for the external display, press and hold the Option key while selecting the Scaled button.If you're using an external display to, your Mac optimizes for whichever display is selected in the ”Optimize for” pop-up menu. Allow your Mac to choose the best resolution for that display, or select Scaled and choose a different resolution.When mirroring your displays, you can optimize for the external display instead of your built-in display. If an app looks different than you expect on your Retina display or high-resolution external display, try opening the app in low-resolution mode:.
Quit the app. Open the Applications folder. Click the app once to select it, then choose Get Info from the File menu. From the Get Info window that opens, select the checkbox labeled ”Open in Low Resolution.”.
Close the Get Info window and open the app again.Some apps that work best in low-resolution mode or that work only in low-resolution mode will have this mode already turned on, and in that case you might not be able to turn it off. The app developer might offer an update that includes support for the Retina display.
.On your Mac, choose Apple menu System Preferences, click Displays, then click Night Shift.Click the Schedule pop-up menu, then choose an option.Off: Choose this if you don’t want Night Shift to come on automatically.Custom: Choose this to specify the times you want Night Shift to turn on and off.Sunset to Sunrise: Choose this to use Night Shift from sunset to sunrise.If you select this option, your Mac uses your location to determine when it’s nighttime for you. To use this option, you must turn on Location Services. Choose Apple menu System Preferences, click Security & Privacy, then click Privacy. Select Enable Location Services, scroll down to System Services, click Details, select Setting Time Zone, then click Done.
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January 2023
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