On Monday November 20 2023 06:30:39 Kristian wrote:
>On the other side, it seems at least GNOME somehow manages to handle this
>automatically so there apparently seems some way to detect the current
>configuration and use the "right" settings when booting the system.

I honestly don't know how far X11's support for multi-dpi configs goes, and 
then of course to what extent KDE has been written with the idea that one could 
have such a set-up (and support for it). The main components that come to mind 
where this is crucial are the ones always spanning all screens, so KWin and a 
number of the Plasma shell components.
But really every application faces the question when you move a window from one 
screen to another (or actually let it span multiple screens). How are you going 
to handle that?

(How) does Gnome "somehow manage" to do something sensible in such situations? 
And if it does: are you certain it isn't using Wayland? I was surprised to find 
that gdm3 uses Wayland now, after upgrading one of my systems to Devuan 
Chimaera (I think that's Debian 11) and I have to assume that an actual Gnome 
desktop would use that too.

One way Gnome might do something sensible is to set the internal hires screen 
to a "normal" *pixel* resolution with an as close as possible integer scale 
factor. That would probably allow to treat both screens like they were 
normal-resolution ones, and let the hardware handle the scaling. This shouldn't 
be different from playing with the DPI setting, besides of course the lack of 
antialiasing at a screen-pixel level.

I'm guessing that Dell came with (or has) MSWin installed, how does that OS 
handle this situation?

R.

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