❦ 21 mai 2015 22:14 +0200, Yves-Alexis Perez <cor...@debian.org> :

>> I can give you a screenshot of what I have to compare, but the text on
>> the tabs should be of the same size as the text in the omnibar (unlike
>> your very first screenshot).
>
> Well, in my case, I'm just fine with no scaling factor (=1). Not sure
> what's usually applied to HiDPI settings versus regular.

Not sure either.

BTW, you didn't set any zoom in Chromium settings? (it's still at 100%)

>> >>  (through switching from HiDPI to regular DPI leaves
>> >> blurry fonts, but that's minor).
>> >
>> > What “switching from HiDPI to regular DPI” means, here?
>> 
>> Switching to an external screen for example. GTK apps are able to adapt
>> automatically. And now Chromium too, but the fonts become a bit
>> blurry. Stop/start Chromium fixes that.
>
> Plugging an external screen and moving Chromium window to it doesn't
> change either.

I don't know if it could handle mixed DPI correctly (Xsettings are per screen 
but
most of the code is for the whole X server). What it does handle
correctly is when DPI is changing entirely.

I don't use a DE, so in my case, I mess with Xsettings for it to
advertise another DPI settings and I tell xrandr to change the X server
one. Dunno what XFCE would do automatically (all the more if you changed
the default settings for Xft/DPI).

Maybe try with Gnome to see if it does things differently.
-- 
Don't just echo the code with comments - make every comment count.
            - The Elements of Programming Style (Kernighan & Plauger)

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