| ▲ | gucci-on-fleek 2 hours ago | |
> If you're using a high-DPI monitor [...] I use a standard 110-DPI monitor (at 200% scaling in Gnome) FWIW, I'm using a 184 DPI monitor with 150% scaling. > you might not notice the blurriness. [...] > Compared to the contents of a browser's viewport, Emacs and the apps that come with Gnome are visually simple, so it took me a year or 2 to notice I'm pretty sensitive to font rendering issues—to the point where I've complained to publishers about their PDFs having unhinted fonts—so I think that I would have noticed it, but if it's really as subtle as you say, then maybe I haven't. I do have a somewhat unusual setup though: I'm currently using
although that might not be required any more with recent versions. I've also enabled full hinting and subpixel antialiasing with Gnome Tweaks, and I've set the following environment variables:
So maybe one of those settings would improve things for you? I've randomly accumulated most of these settings over the years, so I unfortunately can't really explain what (if anything) any of them do.> Yes, Chrome's entire window can be quite blurry if Xwayland is involved, but it now talks to Wayland by default Ah, good to hear that that's finally the default; that probably means that I can safely remove my custom wrapper scripts that forced those flags on. | ||