You are not logged in.
Offline
looks like you've just zoomed in on your browser window. everything that gtk renders seems fine to me.
Offline
Which desktop environment or window manager is that? (i3?)
Looks like the scaling factor is raised -- you can try:
gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface scaling-factor 1
Offline
Woah, looks like everything just got bigger. Try to reduce the scaling factor as mentioned above, or search at the environment settings app if there's an option to reduce it without commands.
Simple is better. That's why I chose Arch Linux.
Offline
looks like you've just zoomed in on your browser window. everything that gtk renders seems fine to me.
That doesn't seem to be the problem. Zooming in and out doesn't effect the size of the browser bar. (Also, I have the same problem with other GTK apps like VLC)
Which desktop environment or window manager is that? (i3?)
Looks like the scaling factor is raised -- you can try:
gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface scaling-factor 1
Oops should have mentioned -- this is Xmonad.
I was optimistic about the scaling factor, but it doesn't seem to have changed anything even after restarting Xorg.
Offline
I may be wrong but I think that the 'org.gnome.desktop.interface scaling-factor' setting will have an effect only if gnome-settings-daemon is running.
Is there anything in ~/.gtkrc-2.0?
Offline
I may be wrong but I think that the 'org.gnome.desktop.interface scaling-factor' setting will have an effect only if gnome-settings-daemon is running.
I suspect that's right. It didn't seem to do anything for me.
Is there anything in ~/.gtkrc-2.0?
It looks pretty innoscent
# -- THEME AUTO-WRITTEN DO NOT EDIT
include "/usr/share/themes/Raleigh/gtk-2.0/gtkrc"
style "user-font" {
font_name = "Sans 10"
}
widget_class "*" style "user-font"
gtk-font-name="Sans 10"
include "/home/gentix/.gtkrc.mine"
# -- THEME AUTO-WRITTEN DO NOT EDIT
/usr/share/themes/Raleigh/gtk-2.0/gtkrc is empty and ~/.gtkr.mine doesn't exist.
I'm feeling pretty stumped
Offline
How about setting the correct DPI explicitly?
Find the current value with:
xdpyinfo|grep resolution
Set it by (eg) calling:
startx -- -dpi xxx
Offline
That works! Thank you Head -- that is the breakthorugh I was looknig for.
Offline