On 2/5/2016 11:37 AM, Jim Graham wrote:
Hi Alexandr,

awt_DesktopProperties.cpp, line 300 - is the "1.0f /" a typo?
   Sorry.  Here is the updated fix without the typo:
     http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~alexsch/8076545/webrev.06/

Also, is there a still a need for the setFontProperty() variants that don't have a scale as the last parameter?
There are fonts like win.ansiFixed.font, win.ansiVar.font, and win.deviceDefault.font which size is the same for any display DPI.

And there are fonts like win.oemFixed.font, win.system.font, and win.systemFixed.font which have one size for DPI 96 and another size for all other DPI.
   For example win.oemFixed.font:
   DPI  96, size: 12
   DPI 144, size: 18
   DPI 192, size: 18
   DPI 240, size: 18

I left them unscaled but may be it is better to have one precalculated scale for this fonts which is used when DPI is not 96.

I updated the setFontProperty() method without scale parameter usage to call with scale 1.0f.

  Thanks,
  Alexandr.


            ...jim

On 2/5/2016 2:12 AM, Alexandr Scherbatiy wrote:

Could you review the updated fix:
http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~alexsch/8076545/webrev.05

   - The awt_DesktopProperties.cpp file is updated to use scaleX for
width rescaling and scaleY for height rescaling

   Thanks,
   Alexandr.

On 2/1/2016 5:51 PM, Jim Graham wrote:
Hi Alexandr,

In awt_DesktopProperties.cpp you are using the Y scaling factor to
scale widths still - see lines 287 (and others in that same function)
and then 322 in another function.  It looks like you'll need
getInvScaleX() and getInvScaleY().

I'll leave it to Phil to comment on the unit test...

            ...jim

On 2/1/16 4:27 AM, Alexandr Scherbatiy wrote:

Could you review the updated fix:
http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~alexsch/8076545/webrev.04/

  - both LOGPIXELSX and Y are used for the theme size scaling.
  - LOGPIXELSY is used for text metrics height rescaling

   Thanks,
   Alexandr.

On 1/29/2016 1:16 PM, Jim Graham wrote:
Hi Alexandr,

Thanks for investigating the behaviors.

With respect to using LOGPIXELSX or Y, these methods are used to scale
both horizontal and vertical measurements so we really should have 2
scale values and rescale methods, one for horizontal use and one for
vertical...

            ...jim

On 1/29/2016 10:41 AM, Alexandr Scherbatiy wrote:
  Could you review the updated fix:
http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~alexsch/8076545/webrev.03

  - LOGPIXELSX is changed to  LOGPIXELSY

On 11/16/2015 1:43 PM, Jim Graham wrote:
Note that LOGPIXELSY is global and static between reboots so it
doesn't really matter which monitor is used to get the value.

Also, the issue is that the measurements are in pixels, so if we
convert them into a resolution independent measurement then the rest of the scaling in the AWT/2D will be correct regardless of any given
monitor's resolution.  We just have to make sure the
"de-pixelization"
of the measurement is an apples-to-apples calculation.

The question in my mind is whether the values they get from
GetTheme*() and SPI_GETNONCLIENTMETRICS are relative to
LOGPIXELSY, or
the more recent Per-Monitor aware DPI APIs, or ...? It would be
interesting to see what happens to those values when you change the
DPI settings on Windows 8.1 and not reboot. If they stay constant
until you reboot then LOGPIXELSY on the main screen would be the
value
to use to de-scale them...

    I tried to use the "Change the size of all items" slider on
Windows
8.1 without rebooting.
    GetDpiForMonitor() returns the updated DPI values: 192, 144, 96
    LOGPIXELSY returns unchanged values:  192, 192, 192
    SystemParametersInfo(SPI_GETNONCLIENTMETRICS,...) returns
unchanged
NONCLIENTMETRICS
    GetThemePartSize() returns unchanged theme part sizes

    It seems that theme part sizes behave in the same way as the
LOGPIXELSY in this case.

    Thanks,
    Alexandr.


            ...jim

On 11/16/2015 12:51 PM, Phil Race wrote:
That seems better. But one more question to get a point clarified.
You are using getDesktopWindow() which is for the primary monitor.
I assume that the 'inversion' results in the value being used to be
independent
of the monitor in a multi-mon situation and so when we move to a 2nd
monitor
that inverted size remains valid ?

If so looks good to me.

-phil.

On 11/16/2015 06:07 AM, Alexander Scherbatiy wrote:

  Hello,

  Could you review the updated fix:
http://cr.openjdk.java.net/~alexsch/8076545/webrev.02

  - round is used instead of ceil
  - inverted scales are used

  Thanks,
  Alexandr.


On 10/30/2015 10:40 PM, Jim Graham wrote:
In this case round may be better. ceil() is more for cases
where you
needed "at least X amount of room", but I don't think a font
size is
an "at least this much" kind of case.

Also, I've been toying with the idea that use of ceil() and
floor()
in any DPI-adjustment equations should really be "ceil(val -
epsilon)" or "floor(ceil + epsilon)" for some small value of
epsilon
chosen just large enough to prevent various round-off errors from
affecting the outcome.  One idea is for 1/256 as the value of
epsilon
since that could equate to the smallest measurable difference in
terms of alpha or interpolation results (or 1/512 for "half the
smallest quantum")...

            ...jim

On 10/29/15 1:36 PM, Phil Race wrote:
size->cx = (int)ceil(size->cx / scale);


So if size->cx / scale works out to be 12.0001 you will round
it up
to 13?

Can you check what pixel size windows gives you in such a case ?
I'd be a little surprised if they did that rather than round.

Is the SetFontProperty that does not accept a scale parameter
still
used
somewhere ?

-phil.

On 10/29/2015 04:53 AM, Sergey Bylokhov wrote:
On 17.07.15 16:27, Alexander Scherbatiy wrote:

- Sergey's point about multi-mon should be checked out.
     Windows 8.1 has option "Let me choose one scaling level
for
all my
displays".
     If I unset it I am able to change the size of all items.
However,
the DPI which returns GetDPIForMonitor is still 2 on HiDPI
displays.

This version looks fine, but I am sure it can be double
checked on
windows 10 at some moment as well.









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