On Tue, Aug 7, 2018 at 11:32 PM, <[email protected]> wrote: > > Gregg > > On Aug 7, 2018, at 5:23 PM, Steve Grundell <[email protected]> > wrote: > > Thanks Gregg. > > So, I presume when you key-in with one of the "Larger" snapsets, it > actually gets larger? (otherwise I would have heard about it by now) > > > the VIAOs all start out at 100% so they all get bigger. And they are > the only ones who really used the SnapSets so that is why you didnt hear > about it. > > on computers with high res and small screens that start out at 200% > (high res / small screen is the combination that gives you large > “recommended” values ) we have the ‘reverse’ problem where the screen > actually gets smaller with LARGER keys. > > ok yes, that's just what I expected. However, when I just tried (on both a 125% and 200% recommended) it larger does make it larger, and I couldn't believe my eyes.
> > That does surprise me - and I'm aware of how stupid that makes me look, > considering I implemented it. > > > Not at all. If your computer doesnt have a high ‘recommendation’ there > isnt any way you would catch it. We didnt catch on here to what was going > on til just recently. > > > It appears that the setting I'm adjusting already takes into account the > "recommended" value, and the QSS just needs tweaking. > > > Really? can you explain more? > So you are not setting the screen scaling % > (or are you taking about the new thing you are doing — vs the old way? > or??? > > > Old - what you currently have. Well, that's the thing. I don't know precisely what I'm setting - it's undocumented. It's a number, where I've worked out that 0=100%, 1=125%, 2=150%, ... However, on a "200% recommended" screen, I'm seeing: ..., -1=175%, 0=200%, 1=225%, ... and larger keys make it larger. Which is why I'm thinking I was, without realising, setting it as relative to the recommendation, rather than absolute.
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