Could you elaborate? Now that you mention it it does look like HiDPI is somehow enabled. How to turn it off?Qt HiDPI mess hits again...
This shows me exactly the same screen as in the OP. What does this mean?Confirm by trying
QT_SCALE_FACTOR=1 vlc
in console
Same results as bob3000 here. RunningQT_AUTO_SCREEN_SCALE_FACTOR=0
QT_SCREEN_SCALE_FACTORS=1
Thanks. This worked and as far as I can tell it doesn't affect other applications.One solution to make the QT_AUTO_SCREEN_SCALE_FACTOR=0 by default is to add it to your /etc/environment file, and reboot.
My screen is nowhere near HiDPI. It's a 26" 1980x1200.Because you try to use HiDPI monitors with software (Qt) that does not support it well yet.
I had the same problem as the OP. That does the trick for me. Thank youHi,
other environment variable can have effect on your scaling,
try to set:
QT_AUTO_SCREEN_SCALE_FACTOR=0
QT_SCREEN_SCALE_FACTORS=1
And I advise against setting scaling factor below 1, it often mess up your scaling (esp. fonts)
Considering it is an 11-year old TV with a VGA input, and Ubuntu running on a clunky SFF Lenovo that's probably just as old as the TV, I seriously doubt there's any HiDPI anywhere in the chain.Because you try to use HiDPI monitors with software (Qt) that does not support it well yet.
Some TV seem to induce a x2 scale in the display server whatever the resolution is. I have the same case at work but it's more a Qt issue than a VLC issue so it's difficult to fix correctly. Even more, it's difficult to know whether you want a scaled display or not on a TV, as you want it more often than not but it's annoying in the cases you don't. The saner way to handle this would be a TV or display server setting but I'm not sure it's very accessible for a lot of people.Considering it is an 11-year old TV with a VGA input, and Ubuntu running on a clunky SFF Lenovo that's probably just as old as the TV, I seriously doubt there's any HiDPI anywhere in the chain.Because you try to use HiDPI monitors with software (Qt) that does not support it well yet.
But the environment settings fix it. Not that it matters much, since the mainboard is dying anyway, but it works as a media center for the time being.
Code: Select all
QT_AUTO_SCREEN_SCALE_FACTOR=0 vlc
Code: Select all
export QT_AUTO_SCREEN_SCALE_FACTOR=0 vlc
OR
export QT_SCALE_FACTOR=1 vlc
Return to “VLC media player for Linux and friends Troubleshooting”
Users browsing this forum: Google [Bot] and 20 guests