You would need a red, yellow, white audio video cable.
Red and white are audio, yellow is video. This applies to standard A/V only.
The yellow cable is the video. It plugs into the yellow video input jack. The white and red, or black and red cables are left and right audio. The connect to the audio in or out jacks.
The yellow cable can be used for the green wire, but cheap white/red/yellow (composite video + audio) cables will have issues working as component video cables for longer lengths, as they usually have poor shielding.
sound left and right and video
They can be used for analog audio. White is always left audio. Yellow could be right, or could also be used for composite video.
The red, white and yellow cables are RCA audio and composite video. You can use any red and white audio cables for the audio side that you might use with a CD player or cassette deck, but the video cable should have some additional shielding on it, particularly for longer runs (more than 3 feet).
Audio and Video cables, red and white for audio and yellow for video, if both units have a S-connector use it. The S-cable is a better video cable. If you use a S-cable you don't use the yellow video cable.
The GREEN and BLACK is a non stereo hook-up cable. Use the Green for VIDEO and the Black for the LEFT channel of AUDIO.
Those are audio-video cables, also called AV cables. Two audio plugs, 1 video. The plugs themselves don't have a special name.
Not sure if they do anything. VGA is a video output on computer not audio, so will convert to the Yellow composite or S/Video cable. Red and white composite cables are for audio and with no audio coming from the VGA I cant see why they are included. Does anyone know or are they just a waste of space.
They can be called A/V cables and ones for HDTV are called component video cables. They all have RCA type plugs and the yellow is video and the red and white are audio on A/V cables. Component Video cable have two additional cables for HD Video signal besides the yellow one.