Grant wrote:
> >> > and indeed XFCE doesn't seem to have very good support for this.
> >> > Maybe you can find some of the settings listed there useful
> >> > though.
> >> >
> >> > Other than that, if you want working DPI scaling, you'll have
> >> > much better luck with KDE 5 / Plasma.
> >>
>
On Di, 05 Sep 20:00:56 +
Floyd Anderson wrote:
On Di, 05 Sep 13:29:13 +
Grant wrote:
[…]
But X should get it right if I use:
DisplaySize 294 166
Looks like a typo. I got:
349.6462 mm × 165.6207 mm
with:
$ bc <<<'scale=4; ppi=276.05; cx=3800; inch=25.4; cx / ppi * inch'
A
On Di, 05 Sep 13:29:13 +
Grant wrote:
Is there a way to digitally discover the true height and width of your
screen in mm?
If you know the shadow mask/dot pitch [1] or the real pixel per inch of your
screen, then calculate it. This way you see if software reports wrong
values.
Got it:
>> Is there a way to digitally discover the true height and width of your
>> screen in mm?
>
>
> If you know the shadow mask/dot pitch [1] or the real pixel per inch of your
> screen, then calculate it. This way you see if software reports wrong
> values.
Got it:
http://pixensity.com/list/dell-x
>> > and indeed XFCE doesn't seem to have very good support for this.
>> > Maybe you can find some of the settings listed there useful though.
>> >
>> > Other than that, if you want working DPI scaling, you'll have much
>> > better luck with KDE 5 / Plasma.
>>
>>
>> Won't I freak out if I'm an xfce
Hello Grant,
On Mo, 04 Sep 12:24:00 -0700
Grant wrote:
Is there a way to digitally discover the true height and width of your
screen in mm?
If you know the shadow mask/dot pitch [1] or the real pixel per inch of
your screen, then calculate it. This way you see if software reports
wrong val
Grant wrote:
> > and indeed XFCE doesn't seem to have very good support for this.
> > Maybe you can find some of the settings listed there useful though.
> >
> > Other than that, if you want working DPI scaling, you'll have much
> > better luck with KDE 5 / Plasma.
>
>
> Won't I freak out if
I'm getting strange results from xdpyinfo. I always get 96x96 DPI and
the screen size changes along with the resolution. When I run 'xrandr
--dpi 200x200' and check xdpyinfo, it reports correctly. But if I log
out and back in to xfce4 without doing anything else, it gives me
On 04/09/17 23:58, Grant wrote:
I'm getting strange results from xdpyinfo. I always get 96x96 DPI and
the screen size changes along with the resolution. When I run 'xrandr
--dpi 200x200' and check xdpyinfo, it reports correctly. But if I log
out and back in to xfce4 without doing anything else
Is there a way to digitally discover the true height and width of your
screen in mm?
>>>
>>>
>>> Yes. xdpyinfo shows the information:
>>>
>>>xdpyinfo | grep -B2 resolution
>>>
>>> If the information is wrong, that usually means one of two things
>>> (sometimes
>>> even both): a) the v
On 04/09/17 23:26, Grant wrote:
Is there a way to digitally discover the true height and width of your
screen in mm?
Yes. xdpyinfo shows the information:
xdpyinfo | grep -B2 resolution
If the information is wrong, that usually means one of two things (sometimes
even both): a) the video dri
> My laptop's 13" screen has a native resolution of 3200x1800 which
> makes everything crazy small on-screen. Is there a good method for
> telling Xorg or xfce4 to compensate, or should I one-at-a-time my
> applications?
Depends on your desktop. I'm not sure if XFCE
On 04/09/17 22:24, Grant wrote:
My laptop's 13" screen has a native resolution of 3200x1800 which
makes everything crazy small on-screen. Is there a good method for
telling Xorg or xfce4 to compensate, or should I one-at-a-time my
applications?
Depends on your desktop. I'm not sure if XFCE sup
>>> My laptop's 13" screen has a native resolution of 3200x1800 which
>>> makes everything crazy small on-screen. Is there a good method for
>>> telling Xorg or xfce4 to compensate, or should I one-at-a-time my
>>> applications?
>>
>> Depends on your desktop. I'm not sure if XFCE supports this, bu
>> My laptop's 13" screen has a native resolution of 3200x1800 which
>> makes everything crazy small on-screen. Is there a good method for
>> telling Xorg or xfce4 to compensate, or should I one-at-a-time my
>> applications?
>
> Depends on your desktop. I'm not sure if XFCE supports this, but in K
On 01/09/17 19:14, Grant wrote:
My laptop's 13" screen has a native resolution of 3200x1800 which
makes everything crazy small on-screen. Is there a good method for
telling Xorg or xfce4 to compensate, or should I one-at-a-time my
applications?
Depends on your desktop. I'm not sure if XFCE suppo
Hello friends,
On Fri, Sep 1, 2017 at 12:16 PM, Grant wrote:
>> My laptop's 13" screen has a native resolution of 3200x1800 which
>> makes everything crazy small on-screen. Is there a good method for
>> telling Xorg or xfce4 to compensate, or should I one-at-a-time my
>> applications? I can adj
Nils Freydank wrote:
> Hi everybody,
>
> Am Freitag, 1. September 2017, 21:08:51 CEST schrieb J. Roeleveld:
> > On Friday, September 1, 2017 7:28:48 PM CEST Mart Raudsepp wrote:
> > > Ühel kenal päeval, R, 01.09.2017 kell 10:16, kirjutas Grant:
> > [...]
> >
> > In KDE/Plasma there is a sca
Hi everybody,
Am Freitag, 1. September 2017, 21:08:51 CEST schrieb J. Roeleveld:
> On Friday, September 1, 2017 7:28:48 PM CEST Mart Raudsepp wrote:
> > Ühel kenal päeval, R, 01.09.2017 kell 10:16, kirjutas Grant:
> [...]
>
> In KDE/Plasma there is a scaling setting in the display section.
> The
On Friday, September 1, 2017 7:28:48 PM CEST Mart Raudsepp wrote:
> Ühel kenal päeval, R, 01.09.2017 kell 10:16, kirjutas Grant:
> > > My laptop's 13" screen has a native resolution of 3200x1800 which
> > > makes everything crazy small on-screen. Is there a good method for
> > > telling Xorg or xf
>> > My laptop's 13" screen has a native resolution of 3200x1800 which
>> > makes everything crazy small on-screen. Is there a good method for
>> > telling Xorg or xfce4 to compensate, or should I one-at-a-time my
>> > applications? I can adjust the resolution down but it makes the
>> > colors lo
Ühel kenal päeval, R, 01.09.2017 kell 10:16, kirjutas Grant:
> > My laptop's 13" screen has a native resolution of 3200x1800 which
> > makes everything crazy small on-screen. Is there a good method for
> > telling Xorg or xfce4 to compensate, or should I one-at-a-time my
> > applications? I can a
> My laptop's 13" screen has a native resolution of 3200x1800 which
> makes everything crazy small on-screen. Is there a good method for
> telling Xorg or xfce4 to compensate, or should I one-at-a-time my
> applications? I can adjust the resolution down but it makes the
> colors look weird.
Aft
On 2017-09-01, Grant wrote:
> My laptop's 13" screen has a native resolution of 3200x1800 which
> makes everything crazy small on-screen. Is there a good method for
> telling Xorg or xfce4 to compensate, or should I one-at-a-time my
> applications? I can adjust the resolution down but it makes
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