----- Original Message ----- > With Xfce, you have to go to 'settings -> appearance -> fonts' and set > the dpi up from 96. I use 192. That also doesn't do things fully right. > It sometimes starts apps on login before it makes the dpi change and > you have to restart them, or sometimes window title fonts or the like > have to be adjusted in size. Overall however it works just fine. > > I don't know about KDE. In KDE, the same is possible 'System Settings -> Appearance -> Fonts' and 'Force Fonts DPI'. Other place to make the experience better is to set icons size and then various tweaking of decorations sizes etc. So it can be tuned up but it's still not yet there. On the other hand, this way it's possible to get working set up where GNOME x2 way is not usable at all - on semi HiDPI displays like Carbon X1 has and if you add combination of this semi HiDPI with non HiDPI external displays... Welcome hell. After some tweaking I was able to find Fonts DPI value + all other values I mentioned to not to have everything too small on X1 and not to have it too big on external LCDs. But there's bright future - Plasma 5 is designed to work with HiDPI and there's also promise to work on HiDPI/no HiDPI support. On the other hand pure Qt choose to go with simple x2 as Gtk (at least for now, I know initial patches supported non-integer scale factor). > Overall, we can always improve, but hidpi screens are completely usable > now under linux (and have been for a long while). So in the end, my combo of Plasma 5 and custom tweaks means I have pretty usable setup but it is still very hackish unless you have a real HiDPI LCD (and no combo of HiDPI/non HiDPI displays). And then switch to console (with defaults ;-). Jaroslav > kevin > > -- > desktop mailing list > desktop@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop -- desktop mailing list desktop@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop