Hi,

Thank you for your answer. However, it has the same effect as using zoomFactor: 
with respect to how the fonts look:
[PastedGraphic-1.png]

And I get the following message in the Transcript:
Automatic deprecation caller rewrite: The method WorldMorph>>#scaleFactor: 
called from UndefinedObject>>#DoIt has been deprecated. Use #zoomFactor: instead

Cheers,
Bernhard

> Am 30.05.2025 um 12:14 schrieb Sebastian Jordan <sebastian.jor...@inria.fr>:
>
> Hello!
>
> It is better if you use #scaleFactor: instead
>
> you can do
>
> World scaleFactor: 1.2
>
> You will have the same zoom effect and it will keep the high resolution.
>
> Cheers,
> Sebastian
>
>> Le 30 mai 2025 à 10:23, Bernhard Pieber <bernh...@pieber.com> a écrit :
>>
>> Dear Pharo Team,
>>
>> Congratulations on & thanks for the Pharo 13 release!
>>
>> Out of the box it looks great on my large HiDPI monitor. The text is very 
>> sharp. However, with the standard zoom factor of 100% the text is too small 
>> for longer work sessions. With the next zoom factor of 150% in the Settings 
>> Browser it is too large.
>>
>> I found out that I could set it manually to 120%:
>> World zoomFactor: 1.2
>>
>> However, then the text does not look sharp anymore:
>>
>> <PastedGraphic-1.png>
>>
>> Is this to be expected?
>>
>> (I am aware that I can set the font sizes in the Settings Browser. Here as 
>> well, the predefined style Small is too small and Medium already too large 
>> for my taste. Setting the list font individually does not seem to have an 
>> effect, by the way.)
>>
>> Cheers,
>> Bernhard
>>
>>> Am 23.05.2025 um 08:56 schrieb Esteban Lorenzano via Pharo-users 
>>> <pharo-users@lists.pharo.org>:
>>>
>>> Dear Pharo users and dynamic language lovers:
>>>
>>> We have released [Pharo](https://pharo.org/) version 13!
>>>
>>> What is Pharo?
>>>
>>> Pharo is a pure object-oriented programming language and a powerful 
>>> environment focused on simplicity and immediate feedback.
>>>
>>> [Screenshot of Pharo 13]
>>>
>>> <Pharo13.png>
>>>
>>> - Simple & powerful language: No constructors, no types declaration, no 
>>> interfaces, no primitive types. Yet a powerful and elegant language with a 
>>> full syntax fitting in one postcard! Pharo is objects and messages all the 
>>> way down.
>>> - Live, immersive environment: Immediate feedback at any moment of your 
>>> development: Developing, testing, debugging. Even in production 
>>> environments, you will never be stuck in compiling and deploying steps 
>>> again!
>>> - Amazing debugging experience: Pharo environment includes a debugger 
>>> unlike anything you’ve seen before. It allows you to step through code, 
>>> restart the execution of methods, create methods on the fly, and much more!
>>> - Pharo is yours: Pharo is made by an incredible community, with more than 
>>> 100 contributors for the last revision of the platform and hundreds of 
>>> people constantly contributing with frameworks and libraries.
>>> - Fully open-source: Pharo full stack is released under 
>>> [MIT](https://opensource.org/licenses/MIT) License and available on 
>>> [GitHub](https://github.com/pharo-project/pharo)
>>> … more on the [Pharo Features page](http://www.pharo.org/features).
>>>
>>> In this iteration of Pharo, we continue working on our objectives of 
>>> improvement, clean-up and modularization.
>>> Also, we included a number of usability and speed improvements.
>>> A detailed list of changes and improvements is available in our 
>>> [Changelog](https://github.com/pharo-project/pharo-changelogs/tree/master/weekly)
>>>  (weekly based)
>>>
>>> Some highlights of this amazing version:
>>>
>>> Highlights
>>>
>>> Tools
>>>
>>> - Spec Tools remembering their size
>>> - Microdown enhancements
>>> - HDPI support
>>> - Zoomable UI
>>> - New list, tables and trees, allowing any presenter as their content
>>> - Better source code text navigation and edition
>>> - New Process Browser
>>> - New Transcript (introducing also the Object Transcript)
>>> - Organic window manager
>>>
>>> System
>>>
>>> - Better refactorings UX Cleaner leaner code logic
>>> - More robust and faster halt implementation
>>> - Debug points to enhance the debugging experience
>>> - Clean-ups
>>>
>>> Virtual machine
>>>
>>> - Async IO using epoll on unixes
>>> - Faster byte array / string comparisons
>>> - Improve Windows support for non ASCII filenames
>>> - FreeBSD support
>>> - Update SDL2 version in OSX (Intel & Apple)
>>> - Minimal MacOS version required raised to MacOS 11 and above
>>>
>>> Development Effort
>>>
>>> This new version is the result of 698 Pull Requests integrated just in the 
>>> Pharo repository.
>>> We have closed 865 issues and received contributions from more than 70 
>>> different contributors.
>>> We also have a lot of work in the separate projects that are included in 
>>> each Pharo release:
>>>
>>> - http://github.com/pharo-spec/NewTools
>>> - http://github.com/pharo-spec/Spec
>>> - http://github.com/pharo-vcs/Iceberg
>>> - https://github.com/pharo-graphics/Roassal
>>> - http://github.com/pillar-markup/Microdown
>>> - http://github.com/pillar-markup/BeautifulComments
>>> - http://github.com/pharo-project/pharo-vm
>>>
>>> Contributors
>>>
>>> We always say Pharo is yours. It is yours because we made it for you, but 
>>> most importantly, because it is made by the invaluable contributions of our 
>>> great community (yourself).
>>> A large community of people from all around the world contributed to Pharo 
>>> 13.0 by making pull requests, reporting bugs, participating in discussion 
>>> threads, providing feedback, and a lot of helpful tasks in all our 
>>> community channels.
>>> Thank you all for your contributions.
>>>
>>> The Pharo Team
>>>
>>> Discover Pharo: https://pharo.org/features
>>>
>>> Try Pharo: http://pharo.org/download
>>>
>>> Learn Pharo: http://pharo.org/documentation
>>>
>>> ​

Reply via email to