Hi,
While I'm at it, here's another issue I'm seeing: with mixed-DPI setups
using KDE, LibreOffice's scaling is completely out of whack on
secondary monitors. This is my setup:
- Fedora KDE spin
- Laptop is using 1.75x scaling
- External monitor is using 1x scaling
LibreO
On 16/11/23 15:35, Frederic Muller wrote:
On 15/11/2023 09:55, Frederic Muller wrote:
On 15/11/2023 04:42, Stephen Morris wrote:
On 14/11/23 19:34, Frederic Muller wrote:
Hi!
Upgraded from F38 and trying to get 150% scaling as 100% is too
small and 200% too big. Both
|gsettings reset
On 15/11/2023 09:55, Frederic Muller wrote:
On 15/11/2023 04:42, Stephen Morris wrote:
On 14/11/23 19:34, Frederic Muller wrote:
Hi!
Upgraded from F38 and trying to get 150% scaling as 100% is too
small and 200% too big. Both
|gsettings reset org.gnome.mutter experimental-features or
On 15/11/2023 04:42, Stephen Morris wrote:
On 14/11/23 19:34, Frederic Muller wrote:
Hi!
Upgraded from F38 and trying to get 150% scaling as 100% is too small
and 200% too big. Both
|gsettings reset org.gnome.mutter experimental-features or gsettings
set org.gnome.mutter experimental
On 14/11/23 19:34, Frederic Muller wrote:
Hi!
Upgraded from F38 and trying to get 150% scaling as 100% is too small
and 200% too big. Both
|gsettings reset org.gnome.mutter experimental-features or gsettings
set org.gnome.mutter experimental-features
"['scale-monitor-framebuf
Hi!
Upgraded from F38 and trying to get 150% scaling as 100% is too small
and 200% too big. Both
|gsettings reset org.gnome.mutter experimental-features or gsettings set
org.gnome.mutter experimental-features "['scale-monitor-framebuffer']"
and logging out do nothing. I
hange over time).
Desktop scaling is always tricky and this time I only get it to work
on 1 of those 3 Thinkpads. They are 3rd, 6th and 8th generation ones.
Currently it only works on the 8th gen one.
I type this:
gsettings set org.gnome.mutter experimental-features
"['scale-monitor-f
Hi!
At each new Fedora release I have 3 thinkpads to 'upgrade'. In fact I do
fresh installs for those and have a list of steps to perfom so I don't
forget anything (list which I maintain and update at each release as
things do change over time).
Desktop scaling is always
On 5/14/22 04:03, Tim via users wrote:
On Fri, 2022-05-13 at 08:47 -0500, Anil Felipe Duggirala wrote:
My questions:
1. Is there another way to enable fractional scaling? (Gnome and
Wayland)
In my opinion scaling is a bad hack to avoid properly sizing a GUI to
the current screen resolution and
Tim:
>> In my opinion scaling is a bad hack to avoid properly sizing a GUI
>> to the current screen resolution and dimensions, and produced
>> no end of rendering side effects when I messed with it in the past.
Anil Felipe Duggirala:
> I don't know what you mean by "
On 14/05/2022 13:38, Anil Felipe Duggirala wrote:
On Sat, May 14 2022 at 11:33:17 AM +0930, Tim via users
wrote:
On Fri, 2022-05-13 at 08:47 -0500, Anil Felipe Duggirala wrote:
My questions: 1. Is there another way to enable fractional
scaling? (Gnome and Wayland)
In my opinion
On Sat, May 14 2022 at 11:33:17 AM +0930, Tim via users
wrote:
On Fri, 2022-05-13 at 08:47 -0500, Anil Felipe Duggirala wrote:
My questions:
1. Is there another way to enable fractional scaling? (Gnome and
Wayland)
In my opinion scaling is a bad hack to avoid properly sizing a GUI to
On Fri, 2022-05-13 at 08:47 -0500, Anil Felipe Duggirala wrote:
> My questions:
> 1. Is there another way to enable fractional scaling? (Gnome and
> Wayland)
In my opinion scaling is a bad hack to avoid properly sizing a GUI to
the current screen resolution and dimensions, and produced
Hello everyone,
I have installed Fedora 36 on a high-dpi laptop (Del XPS 9550) and Gnome; Im
having trouble setting the scaling to 250% (200 is too small and 300 is too
big).
I tried "enabling" fractional scaling by doing: gsettings set org.gnome.mutter
experimental-features "
On 17/6/21 05:01, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 2021-06-16 2:15 a.m., Stephen Morris wrote:
What I'm trying to figure out how to determine is, is the issue
vmware, or its it the driver which may be supplied by Fedora or
vmware (I'm not entirely sure which), or is it the monitor not
honouring the EDID
On 2021-06-16 2:15 a.m., Stephen Morris wrote:
What I'm trying to figure out how to determine is, is the issue vmware,
or its it the driver which may be supplied by Fedora or vmware (I'm not
entirely sure which), or is it the monitor not honouring the EDID requests?
If the monitor is working o
On 16/6/21 10:25, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 2021-06-15 4:58 p.m., Stephen Morris wrote:
On 15/6/21 23:42, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 15/06/2021 20:36, Stephen Morris wrote:
Just as a side issue to this, when I was searching on the net for
information on video resizing, I found an entry for a person
rai
On 6/15/21 6:02 PM, Stephen Morris wrote:
The question I would have is, if Fedora is standardising on Wayland, how
long are they going to provide Xorg for?
Well, I expect them to provide Xorg as long as Wayland is only able to
work with Gnome and KDE, unless they want everybody who uses any of
On 2021-06-15 4:58 p.m., Stephen Morris wrote:
On 15/6/21 23:42, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 15/06/2021 20:36, Stephen Morris wrote:
Just as a side issue to this, when I was searching on the net for
information on video resizing, I found an entry for a person raising
an issue with video resizing in K
On 16/6/21 01:42, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Tue, 2021-06-15 at 21:42 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 15/06/2021 20:36, Stephen Morris wrote:
Just as a side issue to this, when I was searching on the net for
information on video resizing, I found an entry for a person
raising an issue with video
On 15/6/21 23:42, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 15/06/2021 20:36, Stephen Morris wrote:
Just as a side issue to this, when I was searching on the net for
information on video resizing, I found an entry for a person raising
an issue with video resizing in KDE on Wayland in F34. One of the
responses in t
On Tue, 2021-06-15 at 21:42 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 15/06/2021 20:36, Stephen Morris wrote:
> > Just as a side issue to this, when I was searching on the net for
> > information on video resizing, I found an entry for a person
> > raising an issue with video resizing in KDE on Wayland in F34.
On 15/06/2021 20:36, Stephen Morris wrote:
Just as a side issue to this, when I was searching on the net for information on video resizing, I found an entry for a person raising an issue with video resizing in KDE on Wayland in F34. One of the responses in the issue said that KDE on Wayland was no
On 13/6/21 00:33, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 12/06/2021 21:45, Stephen Morris wrote:
The problem I have is Gnome scales when the windows size changes, but
KDE does not, which is why I put the modelines in the conf file, and
then KDE does scale.
I think it is going to be "difficult" to track down th
On 12/06/2021 21:45, Stephen Morris wrote:
The problem I have is Gnome scales when the windows size changes, but KDE does
not, which is why I put the modelines in the conf file, and then KDE does scale.
I think it is going to be "difficult" to track down the actual culprit. I say
that becaus
the resolutions that Wayland uses (I've forgotten
the name of the Wayland location I would have to look it up on the
net again. As a side issue, when I was looking for info on how to get
KDE to auto-scale like Gnome does, I found a bug report that someone
raised for scaling issues in F34
On Sat, 2021-06-12 at 11:59 +1000, Stephen Morris wrote:
> It's High Dynamic Range, its a methodology for improving the colour
> range, brightness range and detail. I think it is the video
> equivalent of HDR for photography.
With photography, it's generally the combination of two photos one
wher
(I've forgotten the name of the Wayland
location I would have to look it up on the net again. As a side issue,
when I was looking for info on how to get KDE to auto-scale like Gnome
does, I found a bug report that someone raised for scaling issues in F34
and I thought they were saying tha
On 11/6/21 21:48, Tim via users wrote:
On Fri, 2021-06-11 at 20:08 +1000, Stephen Morris wrote:
I don't know whether its a design of the monitor, but under windows,
windows does not provide HDR capability natively, I have to install
a monitor specific driver supplied by the vendor, which unfortu
to get KDE to auto-scale like Gnome
does, I found a bug report that someone raised for scaling issues in F34
and I thought they were saying that the Wayland support in KDE was not
stable, is that still the case?):
# 3840x2160 59.98 Hz (CVT 8.29M9) hsync: 134.18 kHz; pclk: 712.75 MHz
Modeline &
On Fri, 2021-06-11 at 20:08 +1000, Stephen Morris wrote:
> I don't know whether its a design of the monitor, but under windows,
> windows does not provide HDR capability natively, I have to install
> a monitor specific driver supplied by the vendor, which unfortunately
> they don't supply for linu
On 11/06/2021 18:08, Stephen Morris wrote:
My issue with the system settings under both gnome and kde, is I am using a 4K
monitor and the system settings don't offer a 4K resolution, even if the vm is
running fullscreen, and also neither does xrandr specify that a 4K resolution
is available. T
On 11/6/21 15:04, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 11/06/2021 12:46, Tim via users wrote:
On Fri, 2021-06-11 at 09:35 +1000, Stephen Morris wrote:
I am using a 4K monitor that has HDR capabilities which, like
windows, I won't get that functionality in linux without a monitor
specific driver, which doesn't
On 11/06/2021 12:46, Tim via users wrote:
On Fri, 2021-06-11 at 09:35 +1000, Stephen Morris wrote:
I am using a 4K monitor that has HDR capabilities which, like
windows, I won't get that functionality in linux without a monitor
specific driver, which doesn't exist for linux.
Is it really a case
On Fri, 2021-06-11 at 09:35 +1000, Stephen Morris wrote:
> I am using a 4K monitor that has HDR capabilities which, like
> windows, I won't get that functionality in linux without a monitor
> specific driver, which doesn't exist for linux.
Is it really a case of needing a "driver," or is it just t
On 11/6/21 03:18, Barry wrote:
On 10 Jun 2021, at 00:42, Stephen Morris wrote:
On 1/6/21 19:19, Stephen Morris wrote:
Hi,
I have config file in /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d that is listing modelines for
all resolutions that xrandr indicates is supported by the vmware video driver.
With that
> On 10 Jun 2021, at 00:42, Stephen Morris wrote:
>
> On 1/6/21 19:19, Stephen Morris wrote:
>> Hi,
>> I have config file in /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d that is listing modelines for
>> all resolutions that xrandr indicates is supported by the vmware video
>> driver. With that file existing can
On 1/6/21 19:19, Stephen Morris wrote:
Hi,
I have config file in /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d that is listing
modelines for all resolutions that xrandr indicates is supported by
the vmware video driver. With that file existing can anyone suggest
why Gnome in Xorg will scale to 4k resolution when t
Hi,
I have config file in /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d that is listing
modelines for all resolutions that xrandr indicates is supported by the
vmware video driver. With that file existing can anyone suggest why
Gnome in Xorg will scale to 4k resolution when the desktop is scaled,
but Plasma in X11
Hi,
I am running F34 in a Vmware player VM, and issue with KDE not
starting in F33 seems to have been rectified F34, however KDE with Xorg
will not scale. I have a file in /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d that supplies an
xorg modeline to set the screen resolution to as close to 4K as the
vmware playe
Hello all,
I just set up fractional scaling for my external screen, and I end up
with all my XWayland applications become blur. I think it is because
XWayland can not handle the scaling properly. So I whould like to stop
XWayland's scaling while left scaling for Wayland appliations on, I
On 19-05-12 20:29:53, Marko Vojinovic wrote:
...
In how many places you need to resize the fonts, to have everything
appear correctly? Do you use apps from both the Gnome and KDE world
simultaneously (I do)? It seems to me that setting one slider is far
easier than manually resizing a whole bunc
On 13May2019 02:29, Marko Vojinovic wrote:
On Mon, 13 May 2019 08:54:36 +1000
Cameron Simpson wrote:
Doesn't scaling your display inherently involve blurring the stuff
rendered on it?
In my case, not visibly, no. My 3200x1800 scaled up 1.5 times on a
15-inch laptop display looks just
On 5/12/19 10:00 AM, Gianluca Cecchi wrote:
Any better experience if using XOrg in Fedora 30 with these kind of
displays resolutions and dimensions?
I haven't used it, but an Xorg solution is listed here:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/HiDPI#Fractional_Scaling
_
On Mon, 13 May 2019 08:54:36 +1000
Cameron Simpson wrote:
> On 12May2019 19:00, Gianluca Cecchi wrote:
> >having a new 13.3" laptop with resolution of 1920x1080 and Fedora
> >30, I see
> >that Gnome only gives me option of 100% scaling (that renders with
> >too sm
On 12May2019 19:00, Gianluca Cecchi wrote:
having a new 13.3" laptop with resolution of 1920x1080 and Fedora 30, I
see
that Gnome only gives me option of 100% scaling (that renders with too
small fonts ans duch in my opinion) and 200% (that instead appears as too
big).
[...]
Not a sol
On Sun, 12 May 2019 19:00:32 +0200
Gianluca Cecchi wrote:
> having a new 13.3" laptop with resolution of 1920x1080 and Fedora 30,
> I see that Gnome only gives me option of 100% scaling (that renders
> with too small fonts ans duch in my opinion) and 200% (that instead
> a
Hello,
having a new 13.3" laptop with resolution of 1920x1080 and Fedora 30, I see
that Gnome only gives me option of 100% scaling (that renders with too
small fonts ans duch in my opinion) and 200% (that instead appears as too
big).
The laptop is dual boot and I see that the Windows 10 s
On 08/09/2017 10:18 AM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 08/09/2017 11:03 AM, Frederic Muller wrote:
>> Hi!
>>
>> I run GNOME on a 2560x1440 resolution display where I disabled the "double
>> scaling"
>> (not sure how it's called). So one pixel is one dot. U
On 08/09/2017 11:03 AM, Frederic Muller wrote:
> Hi!
>
> I run GNOME on a 2560x1440 resolution display where I disabled the "double
> scaling"
> (not sure how it's called). So one pixel is one dot. Unfortunately when
> running Qt
> applications such as VLC for
Hi!
I run GNOME on a 2560x1440 resolution display where I disabled the
"double scaling" (not sure how it's called). So one pixel is one dot.
Unfortunately when running Qt applications such as VLC for example they
autoscale to 1 dot for 4 pixels making those huge and taking most of
On 12/18/2014 11:45 AM, Volker Sobek wrote:
>
> The window scaling factor is in
> org.gnome.settings-daemon.plugins.xsettings overrides
>
> Good to know for such cases are Alt+F7 to move the window with the arrow
> keys and Super + click anywhere on the window to drag it.
The window scaling factor is in
org.gnome.settings-daemon.plugins.xsettings overrides
Good to know for such cases are Alt+F7 to move the window with the arrow
keys and Super + click anywhere on the window to drag it.
Volker
Am Donnerstag, den 18.12.2014, 10:40 +0100 schrieb Joachim Backes
Hi guys,
I'm running F21/gnome3, and I played a bit with gnome-tweak-tool:
setting the Window Scaling Factor to 2, but now it's impossible to reset
the scaling factor to 1 because the gnome-tweak-tool window is now too
large so the scaling-factor control button is no more visible.
C
Is there a way to scale a photo to fit the screen without the ease of a button
that I can do on my own?
If your screen is 1024x768 do:
cd to dir_where_picture_is, then
convert -resize 1024x768 desktop_pic.png desktop_pic.png
move it to /usr/share/backgrounds if you want to but you don't need.
On 02/25/2013 05:08 PM, Richard Vickery wrote:
On Mon, Feb 25, 2013 at 11:12 AM, "Germán A. Racca"
mailto:german.ra...@gmail.com>> wrote:
On 02/25/2013 03:05 PM, Richard Vickery wrote:
On Mon, Feb 25, 2013 at 7:19 AM, "Germán A. Racca"
mailto:german.ra...@gmail.com>
On Mon, Feb 25, 2013 at 11:12 AM, "Germán A. Racca"
wrote:
> On 02/25/2013 03:05 PM, Richard Vickery wrote:
>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Feb 25, 2013 at 7:19 AM, "Germán A. Racca"
>> mailto:german.ra...@gmail.com**>> wrote:
>>
>> On 02/25/2013 11:44 AM, Richard Vickery wrote:
>>
>> I meant th
On 02/25/2013 03:05 PM, Richard Vickery wrote:
On Mon, Feb 25, 2013 at 7:19 AM, "Germán A. Racca"
mailto:german.ra...@gmail.com>> wrote:
On 02/25/2013 11:44 AM, Richard Vickery wrote:
I meant the former, as did Mr. O'Connor. The experience was the
same in
17 as it
On Mon, Feb 25, 2013 at 7:19 AM, "Germán A. Racca"
wrote:
> On 02/25/2013 11:44 AM, Richard Vickery wrote:
>
>> I meant the former, as did Mr. O'Connor. The experience was the same in
>> 17 as it seems to be in KDE. But my preference is to use Gnome. Which
>> line of code am I to put where to get
On 02/25/2013 11:44 AM, Richard Vickery wrote:
I meant the former, as did Mr. O'Connor. The experience was the same in
17 as it seems to be in KDE. But my preference is to use Gnome. Which
line of code am I to put where to get the same effect in Gnome? Perhaps
this question is better put to the D
I meant the former, as did Mr. O'Connor. The experience was the same in 17
as it seems to be in KDE. But my preference is to use Gnome. Which line of
code am I to put where to get the same effect in Gnome? Perhaps this
question is better put to the Developers group.
On Feb 24, 2013 7:40 PM, "Eddie
On 02/24/2013 10:30 PM, Bill Oliver wrote:
Are you talking about the desktop background image? I think that's a
function of which desktop you are using. I use KDE, and nothing has
changed -- you just right click on the background, choose "Default
Desktop Settings" then choose (or open) the
Are you talking about the desktop background image? I think that's a function of which desktop you
are using. I use KDE, and nothing has changed -- you just right click on the background, choose
"Default Desktop Settings" then choose (or open) the image, then pick the
"scaled" option. I do
There's got to be a way, and it's probably a very simple config file.
On Sun, Feb 24, 2013 at 7:05 PM, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. wrote:
> On 02/24/2013 09:04 PM, Richard Vickery wrote:
>
> In 17 there was an easy way to scale a photo for a background to the
> screen. In Fedora 18 this ease is gone
On 02/24/2013 09:04 PM, Richard Vickery wrote:
In 17 there was an easy way to scale a photo for a background to the
screen. In Fedora 18 this ease is gone. Is there a way to scale a
photo to fit the screen without the ease of a button that I can do on
my own?
Thanks,
Richard
I have been de
On 06/13/2012 03:27 PM, Matej Kosik wrote:
Hello,
On Fedora 16, CPU scaling works fine for me.
From this I assume you're now using F17 as you seem to suggest it
doesn't work fine anymore, but I believe everything holds for F16 as well.
On Debian, I was able to determine minim
Hello,
On Fedora 16, CPU scaling works fine for me.
On Debian, I was able to determine minimal/maximal frequencies of CPU-s
by looking to files like this:
cat /sys/devices/system/cpu/cpu*/cpufreq/scaling_{min,max}_freq
Is there a way how can I do the same on Fedora?
Is there a way
Chris Smart wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 10:39 PM, Andre Goree
> wrote:
>>
>> I have the same issue, and I don't know what it could be (I'm on Fedora
>> 12 64- bit KDE4.4). I've worked around the issue using 'cpufreq' at the
>> CLI to manually select my governor & max CPU speed.
>
> I'm gues
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 10:39 PM, Andre Goree wrote:
>
> I have the same issue, and I don't know what it could be (I'm on Fedora 12 64-
> bit KDE4.4). I've worked around the issue using 'cpufreq' at the CLI to
> manually select my governor & max CPU speed.
I'm guessing it's a bug in Fedora's pack
reports inability to step the CPU, so I must be missing some kind
> > > of package or configuration.
> >
> > Does anyone with a KDE install have support for CPU scaling with
> > PowerDevil under System Settings?
>
> Apparently something is broken within KDE here. I
kage or configuration.
>
> Does anyone with a KDE install have support for CPU scaling with
> PowerDevil under System Settings?
Apparently something is broken within KDE here. I just checked, and I don't
have the support for CPU scaling. And I sort-of remember having it before (on
the same
on the add to panel (to add an applet to the top or
> bottom taskbar) menu option, up near the top of the list is something
> called CPU frequency scaling monitor. It offers control as well as
> monitoring, and I believe it's an applet that's available by default.
>
>
I
ar) menu option, up near the top of the list is something
called CPU frequency scaling monitor. It offers control as well as
monitoring, and I believe it's an applet that's available by default.
--
[...@localhost ~]$ uname -r
2.6.27.25-78.2.56.fc9.i686
Don't send private replies to
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 4:22 PM, Chris Smart wrote:
>
> And my assumption is wrong.. I just logged in as root *GASP* and KDE
> also reports inability to step the CPU, so I must be missing some kind
> of package or configuration.
>
Does anyone with a KDE install have support for C
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 4:11 PM, Chris Smart wrote:
>
> But if I run it as my regular user, I don't have permission. I'm
> _assuming_ that this is the reason that KDE doesn't support CPU
> scaling..
And my assumption is wrong.. I just logged in as root *GASP* and KD
ersave.
I also have cpufrequtils installed and on the command line I can
modify it _as root_.
I.e. sudo cpufreq -s -f 1000 -g ondemand
But if I run it as my regular user, I don't have permission. I'm
_assuming_ that this is the reason that KDE doesn't support CPU
scaling..
-c
--
More seriously, if there is a command-line tool that root would use to
adjust the CPU scaling, perhaps it would work to add that command to
the /etc/sudoers file.
You would still need to use the sudo command to run it, but once
having entered your personal (not root) password, you could issue
Tim wrote:
> On Tue, 2010-03-02 at 11:25 +1100, Chris Smart wrote:
>
>> Is there a way for non-root users to be able to administer CPU
>> scaling? Currently the interfaces are all owned by root:root and short
>> of a hack to change their permissions on boot, I
On Tue, 2010-03-02 at 11:25 +1100, Chris Smart wrote:
> Is there a way for non-root users to be able to administer CPU
> scaling? Currently the interfaces are all owned by root:root and short
> of a hack to change their permissions on boot, I'm wondering if
> there's a &quo
On Tue, Mar 2, 2010 at 11:27 AM, Don Quixote de la Mancha
wrote:
>
> Unsolder the crystal on your motherboard, then solder in a slower one.
Apart from that :-P
-c
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On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 4:25 PM, Chris Smart wrote:
> Is there a way for non-root users to be able to administer CPU
> scaling?
Unsolder the crystal on your motherboard, then solder in a slower one.
I'll send you my bill in the mail.
Don Quixote
--
Don Quixote de la
Is there a way for non-root users to be able to administer CPU
scaling? Currently the interfaces are all owned by root:root and short
of a hack to change their permissions on boot, I'm wondering if
there's a "proper" way to do it?
Thanks,
-c
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