Well, I just read the AquaSalGraphics code and there is a sanity check that limits it to 200DPI!
I’m just testing now what happens if I set the max to 300. Chris > On 29 Jan 2016, at 9:39 PM, Tomaž Vajngerl <qui...@gmail.com> wrote: > > Hi, > > On Thu, Jan 28, 2016 at 9:52 AM, Chris Sherlock > <chris.sherloc...@gmail.com> wrote: >> I did a calculation from http://www.sven.de/dpi and apparently I have a >> pixel density of 267.02 PPI. >> >> Wondering if this is skewing the calculations. > > OS usually doesn't tell the correct monitor DPI to the application but > usually just reports 96 DPI (if no scaling is applied). In windows you > can change the scale levels - 100%, 125%, 150%, 200%,... which just > adjusts what DPI is reported to the application (100% - 96DPI, 125% - > 120DPI, 150% - 144 DPI, 200% - 192DPI...) so the application can scale > accordingly (at least fonts). I'm not sure how OSX does this. > > You should check what DPI is actually reported to LO - OutputDevice > has mnDPIX and mnDPIY - check where they are set and to what value. > DPI influences how pixels are converted to and from actual units (mm, > inch, twips,..) It could be that we transform between units just too > much and the error accumulates if the DPI is set to a weird value. > Tracking this down could be tricky. > >> Chris > > Regards, Tomaž _______________________________________________ LibreOffice mailing list LibreOffice@lists.freedesktop.org http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/libreoffice