Terry, > A physically large display should have physically larger pixels, but see > below.
:-) Although the width of the monitor on which the default font size is used is 47 cm and that of the TV is 81, the distance to the monitor is about 65 cm, while the distance to the TV is about 2.5 meters. In other words, I'm relativily over twice as far from the TV as from the monitor. Hence the need for a larger font. > AFAIK, Toplevel windows do not have a font setting. Great. That effectivily means that, if I want to be able to read a windows caption, my distance to the display is fixed . :-( > So the system settings would need to be changed to get relatively larger > window text. Not easy, even if possible, from within a python program. If it would be able to be programmatically set (even if a reboot would be necessary) I would like to know how that its done (where do the changes need to be written to). ... that is, if it doesn't trash the desktop every time its switched. :-) > Row height is set with the Treeview rowheight style. I also found the "rowheight" style (in a bit of example code). And after quite a bit more googeling I found that you could ask the font for its "linespace" metrics and apply that as the rowheight. Nothing automagical, but it works. > Searching "python tkinter treeview height" returns Q&As on Stackoverflow > and other forums. :-) I've not been leaning back in that regard. But its a hell of a job when you do not even know what exactly that you're looking for. > If you allow dynamic font changes, you have to redo row height and column > widths The whole idea was just a static change, before any of the widgets where created. Alas, tkinter doesn't work that way. But yes, I have seen code dealing with such dynamic font-size changes. Thanks for the suggestions. Regards, Rudy Wieser -- https://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list