On Sat, 29 Aug 1998, LUK ShunTim wrote:
> > Yes you can. You just treat the size of your desktop like the colour
> > depth, and run an X server for each kind. (There's a package to allow
> > one to cut and paste between different server instances.)
> >
>
> Where can I get it to have a try?
The
David Wright wrote:
>
> On Fri, 28 Aug 1998, LUK ShunTim wrote:
>
> > Thanks. I got it. This is what I observed.
> >
> > I change the "Display" subsection of my XF86Config to this:
> >
> > Subsection "Display"
> > Depth 8
> > Modes "1024x768" "800x600" "640x480"
>
On Fri, 28 Aug 1998, LUK ShunTim wrote:
> Thanks. I got it. This is what I observed.
>
> I change the "Display" subsection of my XF86Config to this:
>
> Subsection "Display"
> Depth 8
> Modes "1024x768" "800x600" "640x480"
> Virtual 1024 768
>
Ole J. Tetlie wrote:
>
> Virtual resolution is a feature of XFree86. It allows you to work
> on a larger space than the actual resolution of your display. It
> works almost exactly as if you had a display with better resolution.
> I don't think you can really disable it, but you can avoid noticing
*-LUK ShunTim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
|
| Ole J. Tetlie wrote:
| >
| > *-LUK ShunTim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
| > |
| > | I'm just wondering whether enabling virtual resolution is compiled
| > | default in X servers. Even if I commented out all "Virtual" options in
| > | my XF86Config file, I still get the
Ole J. Tetlie wrote:
>
> *-LUK ShunTim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> |
> | I'm just wondering whether enabling virtual resolution is compiled
> | default in X servers. Even if I commented out all "Virtual" options in
> | my XF86Config file, I still get the virtual desktops. I'm using the
> | XF86_Mach64 s
*-LUK ShunTim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
|
| I'm just wondering whether enabling virtual resolution is compiled
| default in X servers. Even if I commented out all "Virtual" options in
| my XF86Config file, I still get the virtual desktops. I'm using the
| XF86_Mach64 server.
|
| Any hint if I'd like to
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