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How to Calculate Pixel Density

What is Pixel Density?

A pixel density (PPI — pixels per inch) calculator determines screen sharpness from resolution and physical display size. Higher PPI = sharper image, less visible pixelation.

Formula

PPI = √(width² + height²) / diagonal(inches); DPI ≈ PPI for screen density; higher = sharper
PPI
Pixels Per Inch (pixels/inch)
d
Diagonal screen size (inches)
w, h
Screen resolution (pixels)

Step-by-Step Guide

  1. 1PPI = √(W² + H²) / diagonal (inches)
  2. 2W, H = horizontal and vertical resolution in pixels
  3. 3Apple Retina display threshold: ~300 PPI at arm's length
  4. 4TVs viewed from further away can be acceptable at 40–80 PPI

Worked Examples

Input
1920×1080 (Full HD) on 24" monitor
Result
PPI = √(1920²+1080²)/24 = √(3,686,400+1,166,400)/24 = √4,852,800/24 ≈ 91.8 PPI

Frequently Asked Questions

What's a good PPI?

Phone: 300+ PPI (retina). Laptop: 150-200 PPI. Desktop: 90-110 PPI. Higher = crisper text/images.

Why does screen size affect PPI?

Same resolution on larger screen spreads pixels farther apart = lower PPI. 1920×1080 at 24" vs 27" looks different.

How do I calculate if my screen is sharp enough?

Calculate PPI from resolution and diagonal. If >150 PPI, text is crisp. <90 PPI may show pixelation.

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