This Week in KDE Plasma: Better fractional scaling (blogs.kde.org)
from JRepin@lemmy.ml to linux@lemmy.ml on 14 Dec 17:42
https://lemmy.ml/post/23578467

This week’s headliner change is something that I think will make a lot of people happy: better fractional scaling! Vlad and Xaver have been hard at work to snap everything to the screen’s pixel grid, with the effect that using a fractional scale factor now results in a lot less blurriness as well as no more gaps between windows and their shadows. You’ll see it in the screenshot below (which was taken at 175% scale) but the effects are subtly better everywhere. Really great stuff! And lots more too, of course.

#linux

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TheRealCharlesEames@lemm.ee on 14 Dec 17:44 next collapse

Is this why steam is blurry on gnome?

exu@feditown.com on 14 Dec 18:13 collapse

Not really. The reason is that Steam (and an unfortunate number of other programs) run through Xwayland when your compositor is using Wayland. If you then use fractional scaling, Xwayland will render at the fractional of your resolution and will be scaled linearly to your display. This results in general bluriness for X11 applications.

Kwin, to my knowledge, is the only Wayland compositor that allows decoupling Wayland scaling from Xorg (and does so by default). While this results in different scaling behaviour for X11 apps, it does mean they are never blurry.

darklamer@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 15 Dec 12:29 collapse

If you then use fractional scaling, Xwayland will render at the fractional of your resolution and will be scaled linearly to your display.

This has recently been fixed:

release.gnome.org/47/

Eyron@lemmy.world on 15 Dec 13:48 collapse

A hidden experimental flag isn’t “fixed.” It might be the start, but until it’s stable and usable through the normal UI, it’s not really done.

janNatan@lemmy.ml on 14 Dec 20:42 next collapse

SHHH! Don’t tell Gnome that there are options other than 100% and 200%.

brandon@lemmy.ml on 15 Dec 16:08 collapse

My Gnome has everything between 100% and 350% in 25% increments?

[deleted] on 15 Dec 16:04 collapse

.