Display may refer to:
==Technology== Display device, output device for presenting information, including: Electronic visual display, output device to present information for visual or tactile reception Cathode-ray tube (CRT), that uses an electromagnetically deviated electron beam to scan and stimulate a phosphorescent screen; the earliest and once the dominant type of electronic display, but is very large and heavy for the screen size, and thus completely obsolete at the early 21st century Flat-panel display (FPD), video display that is much lighter and thinner than deeper, usually older types Liquid-crystal display (LCD), displays that use liquid crystals to form images Liquid crystal display television (LCD TV), color TVs that use an LCD to form images Plasma display, that uses small plasma cells that responds to electric fields to generate colored images. Light-emitting diode (LED), emitting light when electrically charged, producing electroluminescence Stereo display, a display device able to convey image depth to a viewer Volumetric display, forms a visual representation of an object in three physical dimensions Video projector, an image projector that projects a video image onto a reflective projection screen. Rear projection, a type of large-screen display technology that uses a bottom-mounted CRT projector to reflect an image off an angled screen. Refreshable braille display, electromechanical device to display braille characters Split-flap display, electromechanical alphanumeric device, often used as a public transport timetable in airports or railway stations Flip-disc display, electromechanical dot matrix technology used for large outdoor signs Video card, also known as "display card", an expansion card that generates images to display device Display list, series of graphics commands that define an output image Display register or data structure, for locating the stack frames of nested functions in computer programming Display resolution, refers to the number of distinct pixels of a digital TV or monitor
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).