See my reply above concerning native resolution and accessibility
features. I don't use Gnome as a daily desktop, but I'm sure it has a
scaling feature also. At the least, you can increase the various UI font
sizes.
Regards,
Adrien
On 6/29/23 3:14 PM, Default User wrote:
Actually, no - I am
On Thu, 2023-06-29 at 13:08 -0700, Stan Brown wrote:
> On 2023-06-29 12:59, Default User wrote:
> > Unfortunately, I still do not know any way to resize the window to
> > less
> > that the minimum dimensions set by the programmer(s).
>
> Apologies if I'm misremembering, but I think you're in Windo
On 2023-06-29 12:59, Default User wrote:
> Unfortunately, I still do not know any way to resize the window to less
> that the minimum dimensions set by the programmer(s).
Apologies if I'm misremembering, but I think you're in Windows. (The
rationale for making _any_ window non-resizable escapes me
On Wed, 2023-06-28 at 23:34 -0500, Tommy Trussell wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 26, 2023 at 8:00 PM Default User
> wrote:
> > Well, doing Alt-F7, then moving bit by bit with the arrow keys, did
> > work to move the window up, so it can be used to edit the
> > Preferences
> > window. I thought I had tried t
This may not be ideal for your situation, but try a higher resolution
with a larger system font.
Most modern video hardware performs better and lasts longer at its
native resolution though. There are ways to find that on Debian.
Ideally, run it at native resolution and adjust UI items to suit
I seem to recall that was once 800x600, but I think they upped it a
couple of years ago. I'm not sure what the new minimum is now.
Regards,
Adrien
On 6/28/23 11:34 PM, Tommy Trussell wrote:
There are several places where GnuCash probably ought to handle lower
resolutions, but there's a stated
On Mon, Jun 26, 2023 at 8:00 PM Default User
wrote:
> Well, doing Alt-F7, then moving bit by bit with the arrow keys, did
> work to move the window up, so it can be used to edit the Preferences
> window. I thought I had tried that earlier without success, but maybe I
> just wasn't doing it "right
On Sun, 2023-06-25 at 19:33 -0500, David Carlson wrote:
> Well, I am running GnuCash 4.8 usually in Ubuntu 22.04, and I see
> that the Preferences window fills the vertical space where my display
> is set to 1366 x 768. There is no need for the window to be that
> tall and fixed in size without a
Well, I am running GnuCash 4.8 usually in Ubuntu 22.04, and I see that the
Preferences window fills the vertical space where my display is set to 1366
x 768. There is no need for the window to be that tall and fixed in size
without a scrollbar. I would file an enhancement bug report to give that
Default User hunguponcontent,
This is probably a Wayland windowing system problem, not a GnuCash
problem. On Xorg, the window is easily resizable and movable.
What have you tried besides changing the display resolution back and forth?
If you were on Xorg, I would say try these individual sol
On Sun, 2023-06-25 at 16:19 -0500, David Carlson wrote:
> Do you have a friend or neighbor that could loan you a high
> resolution monitor for a few hours?
>
> On Sun, Jun 25, 2023, 2:09 PM Default User
> wrote:
> > Hello!
> >
> > I am trying to set up GnuCash:
> >
> > Version: 4.13
> > Build I
Do you have a friend or neighbor that could loan you a high resolution
monitor for a few hours?
On Sun, Jun 25, 2023, 2:09 PM Default User
wrote:
> Hello!
>
> I am trying to set up GnuCash:
>
> Version: 4.13
> Build ID: 4.13+(2022-12-17)
> Finance::Quote: 1.54
>
> on Debian 12 (bookworm), 64-bit
Hello!
I am trying to set up GnuCash:
Version: 4.13
Build ID: 4.13+(2022-12-17)
Finance::Quote: 1.54
on Debian 12 (bookworm), 64-bit, using Gnome 43.4, wayland windowing
system (not xorg).
This is a .deb package, "GnuCash Version: 1:4.13-1, Built-Using:
googletest (= 1.12.1-0.2)", from the De
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