http://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1124508
http://bugzilla.opensuse.org/show_bug.cgi?id=1124508#c27
--- Comment #27 from Felix Miata
Felix, you are definitely right that screen resolution does make a difference,
That's incomplete, thus inaccurate. Standing alone, screen resolution makes no difference. It's the combination of screen resolution and screen size that make a difference. The two combined are called display density, measured in DPI or PPI, commonly labeled HiDPI when the display's actual physical number is some arbitrarily above average number, likely the angularly defined reference pixel density 96 from CSS specifications times two, 192. 192 is reached on 4K screens at just under 23". On 2560x1440 192 is at just under 15.3", and 1920x1080 just under 11.5". Note in my comment #13 screenshot the reported 120 DPI is a logical DPI resulting from software settings. Logical DPI is the "knob" used for GTK/Gnome "scaling". Under the covers that knob is xrdb's Xft.dpi, which QT/KDE respond to when present, and indeed is implementor of the KDE desktop settings font tab value for "DPI". Physical PPI is the important number determining usability, the actual physical pixel density.
but please don't forget that this is the inst-sys with a much more restricted environment and no KDE/GNOME/Xfce/whatever desktop to get any defaults from.
I get that. I think QT has a built-in initial value of 9pt, maybe 10pt, based on what I remember appears in the fonts tab when qt5ct is initialized on a virgin installation. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are on the CC list for the bug.