"Jim C. Brown"
>> Or the same size. Don't forget, Windows XP will cover up part of the >> window >> even when the GTK version switches to 'full screen'. > > This is easily worked around by activiating the auto-hide feature of the > taskbar. Kludge. You should *never* have to modify your host for a emulator and guest OS to work right. > Well, scaling is actually not so convient as it can make the graphics, > especially > characters in small font, too small to see clearly. Scaling to make the > window > larger than the guest resolution might be useful though. True. Depends on how much you scale, though. Dropping a 1024 guest down to 800 or so would still be mostly usable. I was also thinking about doing it as a way to have a 'small' qemu window showing what the guest is doing while you are doing something else. Kind of a live action thumbnail view. Except not that small. Custom sizes would be nice, but they'd probably require too much scaling effort. Simply being able to drop things down to 1/2, 1/4, 1/8th resolutions would probably be enough, and not too time consuming. (Kind of like the old days when word processors used to "greek" the text so you could see what the overall page layout would look like. It wasn't always easily readable, but you got the general idea of what it looked like.) It'd also be useful for people who have fixed size monitors (ie: LCD monitors) and simply can't do larger sizes that an application might need. (Although for them, a more general purpose scaling amount might be more useful.) Sure, it'd hurt performance!! But it might be useful. And certainly more convenient than having to use scroll bars. I have no idea how much work that'd need, though. > Custom sizes wouldn't work too well, it seems a lot of graphics programs > like to insist on standard modes (640x480, 800x600, etc). A lot of windows laptops have odd size screens. Some are a lot wider than normal, etc. Programs work okay with them. But yes, I know what you mean. A lot of programs, both free and commercial, tend to expect certain screen sizes. Often 1024 or larger. I mentioned it because VMWare has the ability to do that. _______________________________________________ Qemu-devel mailing list Qemu-devel@nongnu.org http://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/qemu-devel