@[email protected] to [email protected] • edit-21 year agoSuperiority brings controversylemmy.mlmessage-square351fedilinkarrow-up11.94K
arrow-up11.83KimageSuperiority brings controversylemmy.ml@[email protected] to [email protected] • edit-21 year agomessage-square351fedilink
minus-squarepaollinkfedilink31•1 year agoFractional scalling works fine for me. Am I doing something wrong? How do I break it?
minus-squareFreemanlinkfedilink9•1 year agoIt’s a global setting, not per monitor or per setup and also quite gimped. Also on Wayland, on my couple of setups. It’s sucks ass.
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink2•1 year agoFractional scaling is per monitor on Wayland. (Unless it’s GNOME that you are using?)
minus-square@[email protected]linkfedilink1•1 year agoThen that means two major Wayland compositors (KDE and GNOME) support per monitor fractional scaling. Which makes me more confused about the “global setting” problem as mentioned by the previous commenter…
Fractional scalling works fine for me. Am I doing something wrong? How do I break it?
It’s a global setting, not per monitor or per setup and also quite gimped. Also on Wayland, on my couple of setups. It’s sucks ass.
Fractional scaling is per monitor on Wayland. (Unless it’s GNOME that you are using?)
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Then that means two major Wayland compositors (KDE and GNOME) support per monitor fractional scaling.
Which makes me more confused about the “global setting” problem as mentioned by the previous commenter…
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