@original poster:
one more trully saving thought (I thought this doesn't work yet, but I was mistaken - I am using it right now successfully)pacman -Sy gtk-qt-engine
(homepage: http://www.freedesktop.org/Software/gtk-qt )
You might want to check the newly added KControlCenter module [Appearance & Themes]
Ahh yes, that worked very well. I neglected trying the other things suggested in the thread due to lack of knowledge/time But last night I did this first and bam... it was beautiful. Thank you!
]]>pacman -Sy gtk-qt-engine
(homepage: http://www.freedesktop.org/Software/gtk-qt )
You might want to check the newly added KControlCenter module [Appearance & Themes]
]]>there is no xservers file anymore for kdm, everything is now defined in kdmrc, but i guess the paramaters could work in kdmrc file then.
then you have to add kdmrc to not upgrade in rc.conf
Isn't kdmrc in the backup=(...) line of kdebase 3.4? (it is in kde 3.3)
It should be persistent during KDE upgrades...
the vt settings in Xservers will probably not work with kde 3.4beta2, i'm not sure because it is not needed anymore.
ICERAM would you be so kind and test it when the new packages are uploaded this weekend?
After the exams (that would be in 1.5weeks)
I need a perfectly running, not up-to-date system until then.
(no big changes in KDE, kernel - which I haven't changed in...., xorg)
It will be a real pitty if I couldn't set up the "-dpi 96" in KDE 3.4. There must be some file in KDE with the X command inside, where I could add "-dpi 96". Oh well... if there isn't, I'll probably tweak xorg.conf to fake the 96dpi setting... we'll see about that.
P.S. can't wait to use a (perfectly?) integrated in KDE XComposite extension.
]]>I don't know. It's KDE's Xservers file KDM understands it, so it doesn't bother me. I'm behind a firewall.. so it doesn't bother me again
:0 ... :3 are used that way for extra login sessions (something like Switch User functionality under WinXP) - KDE supports them since.. 3.3.2.. or.. I don't remember exactly.
ah yes, that's right... KDE runs other instance in the background... yeah yeah makes sense now
]]>:0 ... :3 are used that way for extra login sessions (something like Switch User functionality under WinXP) - KDE supports them since.. 3.3.2.. or.. I don't remember exactly.
]]># cat /opt/kde/share/config/kdm/Xservers | grep -v ^# :0 local@tty1 /usr/X11R6/bin/X -dpi 96 :1 local reserve /usr/X11R6/bin/X :1 vt8 -dpi 96 :2 local reserve /usr/X11R6/bin/X :2 vt9 -dpi 96 :3 local reserve /usr/X11R6/bin/X :3 vt10 -dpi 96
Holy... wha? What's going on with the "local reserve" servers... is this some spiffy trick I don't know about?
]]># cat ~/.gtkrc-2.0
gtk-font-name="Verdana 8"
2. Same font setting for KDE.
3. (because I use KDM)
# cat /opt/kde/share/config/kdm/Xservers | grep -v ^#
:0 local@tty1 /usr/X11R6/bin/X -dpi 96
:1 local reserve /usr/X11R6/bin/X :1 vt8 -dpi 96
:2 local reserve /usr/X11R6/bin/X :2 vt9 -dpi 96
:3 local reserve /usr/X11R6/bin/X :3 vt10 -dpi 96
And that's how I set up the fonts on my system.
I admit, setting 96dpi dirrectly is not the best choice, but I'm not sure how good it will look if I let X decide the DPI setting based on the screen size (which should be defined in /etc/X11/xorg.conf)
Unfortunately I've already changed my fonts and my icons to be tiny. gAIM windows, firefox windows...everything is still huge.
that is totally natural! those aren't qt apps so they don't blend in without further help!
i'd recommend gtk-qt-engine if you really must use those (you can find a pkgbuild somewhere on this forum) since there's always a good component of KDE replacing them like Kopete, Konqueror (much better than FF if you ask me) aso.
always use KDE apps where possible when in KDE since that will save you a great deal of resources. for example FF alone seems to take up as much RAM as KDE with 2 konqueror sessions and several other QT apps open.
same for gaim, it loads GTK2 ontop of QT which both should mostly be run standalone.
KDE apps share resources through dcop as far as i know. not much point loading additional selfcontaining stuff on top of it.