Comment by jhasse
1 month ago
GNOME still has some problems with fractional scaling, but KDE works perfectly. I'm using two displays, one with 150% and one with 100%. No blurry apps and absolutely no issues. Have you tried it recently?
1 month ago
GNOME still has some problems with fractional scaling, but KDE works perfectly. I'm using two displays, one with 150% and one with 100%. No blurry apps and absolutely no issues. Have you tried it recently?
Can you independently set desktop wallpapers on the two screens? I know this seems nitpicky but it's literally impossible with Ubuntu/Gnome as far as I know; I have one vertical and one horizontal and have to just go with a solid color background to make that work.
Yes. It was actually more tedious to do the inverse when I wanted three screens to do a rotating wallpapers from the same set of folders as I had to set the list of folders three times
KDE is in better shape than GNOME, but there are still some nits. Nearly all the available third party themes for example are blurry or otherwise render incorrectly with fractional scaling on.
Still better than macOS and Windows where third-party theming is basically non-existant.
And we were talking about why Linux wasn't an alternative to macOS, weren't we?
So don't use a third party theme.
Problem is, the stock themes aren't to my taste at all.
4 replies →
That’s not a KDE issue though, blame the themes
I've been using fractional scaling on Gnome for years (including on the laptop I'm typing this on) and haven't had any issues. I haven't tried it with two displays that are set differently though. Is that a common thing?
Open an X11 app and it will be blurry.
Also fractional scaling is not supported out-of-the-box in GNOME, you have to set a config value to use it IIRC.