----- Original Message ----- > On Mon, Jan 12, 2015 at 10:49 AM, Jaroslav Reznik <jreznik@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > ----- 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. > > That (mutli monitor mixed dpi) is not a GNOME nor KDE limitation but > X11 ... wayland will allow us to solve that ;) Yeah, I know. Although seems like integer scaling factor is being planned there too. One hint - https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/autohidpi/ for Firefox. Jaroslav > -- > desktop mailing list > desktop@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop -- desktop mailing list desktop@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/desktop