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Oh well then Linux is broken, again. :)

In gedit the icons are bigger than the small ones but not as huge
as in LibreOffice.
Here you can see (LO with small icons):
http://blade2k.humppa.hu/2011-01-05-182917_1920x1080_scrot.png

(ws robert 22435)$ xdpyinfo | egrep "(dimensions|dots per inch)" 
  dimensions:    1920x1080 pixels (518x291 millimeters)
  resolution:    94x94 dots per inch

It is strange for me tho that linux *hardcodes* 75. Where is taht
hardcoded?

On (2011-01-05 17:14), Michael Meeks wrote:
Hi Robert,

On Wed, 2011-01-05 at 16:24 +0100, Robert Nagy wrote:
On (2011-01-05 14:27), Michael Meeks wrote:
  So - I would prefer to stick with large icons; and not use the DPI
setting. I suggest instead, that we only use large icons if the true Y
resolution > 768 - how does that sound ?

Oh wait, I misunderstood. That is wrong. I am on a 1920x1080 display

      :-) so - as I say; the DPI is a constant of 75 across the Linux
desktop, so this is not a switch but a hard coded setting :-)

      I am still convinced that large icons, on a reasonably sized screen
give a -far- more useful view of the metaphore for a beginner user. As I
say, advanced users can make it smaller.

and i still prefer the small icons, it is like that in _every_ app. So
we should stick to the DPI.

      Well; looking at gedit - it is using gtktoolbar.c's:

#define DEFAULT_ICON_SIZE GTK_ICON_SIZE_LARGE_TOOLBAR

      ie. the same size (large) icons that we are using here. Perhaps the
size setting is coming from the theme, in which case we should extract
it and use exactly that setting in LibreOffice - can you have a dig ?
(can you check that stock gtk+ apps do indeed have small toolbar
icons ?).

      Thanks,

              Michael.

-- 
 michael.meeks@novell.com  <><, Pseudo Engineer, itinerant idiot



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