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Here are some notes on the 
https://code.launchpad.net/~hikiko/unity-control-center/u-c-c.checkbox-for-app-scaling/+merge/211681
 MP:

After we introduced the HiDPI changes and the per-monitor Unity scaling
factor (ui-scale gsetting) there was the following problem, discussed at
UDS:

The Qt and Gnome applications would use the scaling-factor and text-
scaling-factor for scaling and not our ui-scale, so their window
contents would have a different size than their decorations, the menus
and the launcher. Another problem was that the Gnome text-scaling-factor
and scaling-factor are settings for the whole desktop whereas ui-scale
is per monitor and there would be some inconsistency anyway when
multiple monitors are plugged in.

So, as a quick partial solution to the problem, we promised to add a
checkbox in each monitor's settings that sets the scaling-factor and
text-scaling factor values in accordance with the ui-scale for that
monitor when it's checked.

This way, the user will see the same size in Unity and the Gtk/Qt
applications in  1 monitor if he checks the checkbox of a monitor.

To allow this, we had to introduce a new gsetting that stores the
selected monitor name here: https://code.launchpad.net/~hikiko
/gsettings-ubuntu-touch-schemas/gsettings-ubuntu-touch-schemas.selected-
monitor/+merge/211680.

Of course this whole feature could be better designed so that the user
receives more visual feedback. We discussed it with the designers team
and they gave us a much better design that will be used in the future:
https://wiki.ubuntu.com/BrightnessAndDisplays#Displays (credits Matthew
Paul Thomas)

For the moment we will just use the checkbox to meet the deadline which
is in a few days, as we promised at UDS.

-----------------------------------------
Some notes  in the logic:
-----------------------------------------

First of all, here is the way we set the scaling-factor and text-scaling
factor to be in accordance with the ui-scale. The idea is Marco
Trevisan's and I paste his algorithm as it was in our Unity team
document:

> Scaling the World…
> So, after scaling unity we should care also about the apps… There are still 
> some troubles to get the best experience:
> Applications doesn’t care about the per-monitor scaling
> Gtk2 and Qt (using a gtk2 rendering style) apps only care about scaling 
> factor, so there’s not much we can do with them
> Gtk3 apps support integer UI scaling only
> [...]
> When that option is true we set the gdk-interface-scaling factor to match the 
> integer part of maximum scaling factor of the
> attached display, while we set the text-scaling-factor to a value that 
> multiplied for the interface scaling factor will result our
> scaling factor (this will apply to both Gtk and Qt applications)
> [...]
> So, our monitor has the scaling factor of 2.25, we set:
>  - scaling-factor: 2
>  - text-scaling-factor: 2.25 / 2 = 1.125
(In the above example 2.25 is the ui-scale, the Unity scaling factor that is 
per monitor)

How the checkbox works:
-------------------------------------------

The first time the user runs the u-c-c (which is after a fresh
installation) the checkbox appears to be checked in the primary monitor
and we set the scaling-factor, text-scaling-factor (Gnome) to match the
ui-scale (Unity), so that the user can have a good visual experience in
his primary monitor. We also store the primary monitor as "selected-
display" in our gsetting to remember this choice.

Every other time:
Unless if the scaling factors have been changed from a non u-c-c application 
(see below for this case), the checkbox appears unchecked for every monitor 
except of the selected that is checked. When the user selects a new monitor, 
u-c-c "remembers" his choice and the new selection appears checked whereas all 
the others are unchecked. The selected monitor is stored in the 
selected-display gsetting in gsettings-ubuntu-schemas.

What if the scaling factors change from outside u-c-c?
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Every time we update the checkbox status (checked or unchecked) we not only 
check the selected-monitor's value but the consistency of the 3 scaling 
factors. 

In other words, if:

scaling-factor * text-scaling-factor != ui-scale +- small_ERROR for the
ui-scale of the selected monitor,

and
 
the selected-display setting matches the selected monitor, 

it means that either the text-scaling-factor or the scaling-factor have
been changed by some external program or the user himself.

We should respect the user's choice, so instead of overriding it we just
set the button status to unchecked and we set the selected-display
gsetting to "" (default). If the user wasnt aware of the change he will
just check the unchecked button to fix his setting, if he was he will
keep his settings having some sort of visual feedback that they don't
match the unity settings in the current monitor from the button status:
unchecked button means mismatch between the unity (ui-scale) and the
applications settings (scaling-factor, text-scaling-factor) for this
monitor.

** Affects: unity-control-center (Ubuntu)
     Importance: Undecided
     Assignee: Eleni Maria Stea (hikiko)
         Status: New

-- 
"Match the display settings" checkbox
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1294578
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