https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=432882
Alvin Wong <al...@alvinhc.com> changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CC| |al...@alvinhc.com Ever confirmed|0 |1 Assignee|krita-bugs-n...@kde.org |al...@alvinhc.com Status|REPORTED |ASSIGNED --- Comment #14 from Alvin Wong <al...@alvinhc.com> --- (In reply to Tyson Tan from comment #0) > 1) Font size for docker panels are too small. > Docker panel's font size is about 25% smaller than those of the Menu and > dialogues. I've received many complains from CJK users that they just > couldn't make the panels readable on Hi-Dpi displays without making the > dialogues unusable. It'd be nice to have an option to customize fonts for > each major UI element types individually. It's nowhere near 25% smaller -- the font size of the dockers is 0.9 times the point size of the regular UI font. Though I agree that 8.1 pt can be a bit small. I think we can consider just not using a smaller font size at all or only for CJK localization. I wonder how non-CJK users think about the smaller font. > 2) Docker title letters doesn't change immediately after a UI font change. > After changing the UI font, we must first undock-and-redock a docker, or > restart Krita to see the changes in Docker titles. This confused a lot of > user into thinking the options were broken. If this is not a problem we can > fix, it'd nice to have a note next to the options telling people the restart > Krita after a font change. I'll give that a look when I have time. It should be fixable. > 3) Give each language a translatable default font list string, so that the > translators can assign proper fonts for their region. Krita's default font, > although looking nice under English, will automatically fallback to the > ugly, ancient CJK default font under CJK locales. It leaves a very bad first > impression for new users. I don't think it is the appropriate way to do it, as translators can't know what fonts are available on the users' systems. It also gets complicated when the user specifies fallback languages. > 4) Move the Font settings into an individual tab in Krita's settings > dialogue. This will make it much easier to discover for new users. Most > people don't even know Krita allows UI font customization till this date. I guess we need more than two options to make them worth having their own tab. (In reply to Tyson Tan from comment #9) > Krita under macOS also uses serif fonts for CJK users. The fonts are all > vector, so they are more readable than what's on Windows, but still looks > out of place and ugly. It might benefit from the same improvements as well. I cannot help with this as I know nothing about macOS at all. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are watching all bug changes.