❦ 10 août 2015 23:29 +0200, Simon Kainz <ska...@debian.org> : >>> This handles the majority of programs I use. A few notable >>> exceptions: gitk scales up some but not all of its fonts >>> (reported as a bug), Celestia's and stellarium's in-rendering >>> text (reported as bugs), old X utilities like >>> xcalc/xconsole/xedit/xdvi/xmag/xman/xmessage (not really worth >>> reporting, better to replace them with modern tools), and >>> anything that relies heavily on toolbars like >>> gimp/inkscape/audacity (tools and other UI elements not scaled >>> up, since they don't use text; unfortunate but expected, as they >>> don't have non-integer scaling). >> >> I don't have any such problems with Gimp and Inkscape and Xft/DPI >> set to 144 (both through xrdb and XSETTINGS). All GTK apps are >> behaving correctly, notably Gimp and Inkscape. It seems GTK is >> doing complex stuff to determine the scaling to be applied, so many >> things may influence it. Other apps fail to understand how GTK >> works and try to emulate it by piling hacks together (notably >> Chromium). >> >> I could show you at Debconf to spot a configuration difference. >> > I am also very interested in this (at Debconf), as i own a MacBook Pro > running Jessie with no problems so far, except some very tiny > checkboxes/radiobuttons in firefox and tiny buttons in gimp/inkscape.
I may have been overly enthusiastic. Since I am only at 1.5 scale, tiny icons are not really my concern: See Gimp and Inkscape: http://postimg.org/image/g5i6rfgsz/ So, there are more stuff than Xft/DPI to adjust. I suppose that setting org.gnome.desktop.interface scaling-factor to 2 may help. However, I am unable to test as it is not based on XSETTINGS but it's just a gnome-control-center property. -- Having nothing, nothing can he lose. -- William Shakespeare, "Henry VI"
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