Re: 100dpi vs 75dpi sizes

2002-03-04 Thread Gary Hennigan
"Chris Olson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Gary Hennigan wrote: > > > could make the window wider, but is there a way to decrease the size > > of these? Looking at the Navigator.ad file is like reading a word > > jumble. > > The font sizes are loaded in the order they appear in > /etc/X11/XF86Co

Re: 100dpi vs 75dpi sizes

2002-03-01 Thread Chris Olson
Gary Hennigan wrote: > could make the window wider, but is there a way to decrease the size > of these? Looking at the Navigator.ad file is like reading a word > jumble. The font sizes are loaded in the order they appear in /etc/X11/XF86Config-4. By putting the entry for 75dpi first, it will for

Re: 100dpi vs 75dpi sizes

2002-03-01 Thread Shaul Karl
> I noticed the other day that I hadn't installed the 100dpi X fonts and > so I went ahead and installed them. When I restarted X some time after > that all my fonts were completely different sizes. I managed to modify > the applications I use most frequently, like XEmacs and my Gnome > terminals,

Re: 100dpi vs 75dpi sizes

2002-03-01 Thread Thomas Shemanske
Look at the order in which the fonts appear in /etc/X11/XF86Config-4 If the 100dpi fonts appear before the 75dpi fonts, try reversing the order and restart the display manager TRS Gary Hennigan wrote: I noticed the other day that I hadn't installed the 100dpi X fonts and so I went ahead and

Re: 100dpi vs 75dpi sizes

2002-03-01 Thread Sean 'Shaleh' Perry
> > I suppose I could go back to the 75dpi fonts but how do I make that > the default for all applications, short of removing the 100dpi fonts? > > Running "testing" with XFree86 4.1.0.1 > The obvious answer is add -dpi 75 to however X gets started on your system -- either the XDM configs or xs