heatlesssun
Extremely [H]
- Joined
- Nov 5, 2005
- Messages
- 44,154
High DPI is not mixed DPI. Also on the first page of your search:
"Microsoft May Never Fix the High DPI Issues in Windows 10"
I think that's what you'd call falling on your own sword.
Seriously I never said there wasn't an improvement in DPI scaling in W10. Yes it is improved, it's one feature that's not worse than in W7, so hooray I guess.
Someone mentions a problem and you mention a non-problem. That's cool, but that still leaves us with the problem.
There's something in the Creators Update that even he noted may make him have to rethink that: https://www.thurrott.com/windows/wi...-biggest-windows-10-insider-preview-build-yet
Improved high DPI support for desktop apps. Given my contention that Microsoft may never be able to fix high DPI in Windows, this one is very interesting: This build update individual in-box apps to be more scalable in high DPI, including Performance Monitor (Perfmon), and it allows the user to enable this on (some) individual apps (!). To do so, right-click on the application’s .exe file, select Properties, navigate to the Compatibility tab, and then turn on System (Enhanced) DPI scaling. Then click OK. “This setting overrides the way that applications handle DPI scaling (which sometimes uses bitmap stretching and can result in applications rendering blurry) and forces them to be scaled by Windows,” Ms. Sarkar explains. “The setting that was previously labeled Disable display scaling on high DPI settings is now referred to as Application scaling.” Note that this works only for apps that use GDI. So you’ll need to test this on an app-by-app basis.