| |||||||||
A seven segment display (sometimes written as 7-segment display) is a form of display that predates the now ubiquitous dot-matrix displays. Seven segment displays are commonly used in electronics as a method of displaying decimal numeric feedback on the internal operations of devices.
A seven segment display, as its name indicates, is composed of seven elements. Individually on or off, they can be combined to produce standardized representations of the arabic numerals, and some letters. The seven segments are arranged as a rectangle of two vertical segments on each side with one horizontal segment on the top and bottom. Additionally, the seventh segment bisects the rectangle horizontally. There are also fourteen segment displays and sixteen segment displays; however, these have mostly been replaced by dot-matrix displays.
Most separate 7-segment displays use an array of light-emitting diodes, though other types exist using alternative technologies such as cold cathode gas discharge, vacuum fluorescent, incandescent filament, LCD, etc. An alternative to the 7-segment display in the 1950s through the 1970s were vacuum tube-like nixie tubes. Integrated displays also exist, with multiple digits. Some of these integrated displays incorporate their own internal decoder, though most do not - each individual LED is brought out to a connecting pin.
Seven segment displays can be found in patents as early as 1908 (United States patent 974943, for example), but did not achieve widespread use until the advent of LEDs and LCDs in the 1970s.
For many applications, dot-matrix LCDs have largely superseded LED displays, though even in LCDs 7-segment displays are very common. Unlike LEDs, the shapes of elements in an LCD panel are arbitrary since they are formed on the display by a kind of printing process. In contrast, the shapes of LED segments tend to be simple rectangles, reflecting the fact that they have to be physically moulded to shape, and the difficulty of forming more complex shapes.