On Sat, 15 Feb 2020 00:10:22 +0100 Luis Felipe Sánchez-Escobar Retamar <felipe.reta...@gmail.com> said:
> Hello all, > > Today we have a lot of differents screens, in both aspects size and > resolution. > And a fixed DPI of 96 has no sense. This is absolutely not true and has not been for a very long time (a fixed DPI). Sure - for the old x multi-screen (not xrandr) setup and api each SCREEN had its own DPI. You used to have multiple root windows and screen with each their own DPI. If you still used X in this way you'd have different DPIs per screen. Xrandr/xinerama merged all screen into a single screen/root window negating that design in return for convenience, and xrandr then exposed the DPI for different regions of the same root window to account for that. > I think that could be a good thing to do an automatic adjustment of DPI > with the algorithm like in http://dpi.lv/ > Implemented directly in X > > And not depends on how each desktop environment manage DPI X already exposes the DPI of each and every screen via xrandr. It has done its job. X is about mechanism, not policy (primarily - debates in corners rage). The policy is then is implemented by desktops/WMs and whatever other tooling a user chooses. As an aside, I'll actually disagree with your link. It's not DPI or PPI. It's PPD. Pixels Per Degree of visual field. A 20m high monitor/projection at the other end of a large room has very very very low DPI, but this is irrelevant to the person sitting at the back of the room far away, whereas a phone held up very close to your eyes is different to a tablet, laptop, desktop etc. due to distance between eyes and screen. What matters is how many pixels per degree. So in then end this is all just a continuation of the "we're emulating paper and a computer is a device to drive a printer as final output" model when we've already moved beyond it in various ways. In the end the only thing that makes sense is a "this is too big/small - make it smaller/bigger" slider and users set it up because that also then accounts for people with 20/20 or better vision or those who need a lot of visual helpers (glasses etc.) and have poor eyesight. For large rooms with large audiences spread through them then you have to make a call for "worst case" (people in the back) and go for that. You also can use xrandr's scale/transform options to have X force scaling at the output level (comes with upsides and downsides - definitely downsides in performance, but upsides in simplicity for apps and consistent physical surface sizing if used right). So in the end you leave it to higher level software to figure it out because that's the only way to solve this with consistence AND performance AND TV on the other side of living room vs projector at other end of presentation hall vs monitor vs. phone etc. use cases. -- ------------- Codito, ergo sum - "I code, therefore I am" -------------- Carsten Haitzler - ras...@rasterman.com _______________________________________________ xorg@lists.x.org: X.Org support Archives: http://lists.freedesktop.org/archives/xorg Info: https://lists.x.org/mailman/listinfo/xorg Your subscription address: %(user_address)s