On Fri, 2004-11-19 at 09:28 -0500, Jason McCormick wrote: > > --On Thursday, November 18, 2004 02:19:20 PM -0600 Marc Schwartz > <MSchwartz@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > I do not use KDE, but do believe that in the KDE configuration > > application, there is a setting for specifying the number of pixels > per > > inch on your display. I suspect that this setting is not correct and > > almost certainly different than under GNOME, hence the differing > font > > sizes and perhaps even different fonts. I believe that the default > is > > usually 96 dpi. > > Actually, I've found it's a little more obtuse than that, but this > put me > on the right track. Apparently Gnome's fonts are fixed at 96x96 dpi > whereas KDE uses the calculated value from your X configuration. > Fedora's > default configs for my screen were setting wacky DPI values like > 147x143. > So KDE was calculating that fonts needed to be larger, etc. Very odd > behavior. I've solved this with very outrageous screen measurement > values. Jason, For GNOME you can adjust the dpi setting using 'gnome-font-properties', either from the console or from the menu under Preferences -> Font. Once in the application, click on the "Details" button and on the next dialog, you will see the Resolution setting at the top. You can adjust the AA settings there as well. If you want to review the display setting details, in a console, you can use 'xdpyinfo'. > > Also, there are other folks here (just within the past 24 hours), > who > > are having general X configuration problems with the same or a > similar > > Dell WUXGA based system (presuming that you might have an nVidia > card > > and are using the nVidia driver). > > > > Might it be possible for you to post your xorg.conf and any key > issues > > (ie. did you remove the rhgb from grub.conf) in a different post > with an > > appropriate subject? That might be helpful to others to learn from > your > > success. > > Sure. Look for this e-mail shortly. The subject will be "FC3 + Dell > WUXGA > Screen + NVidia = Working Configuration" Thanks! Marc