On 3 Feb 2016, at 10:35 PM, SOS <sos@pmg.be> wrote:
On 3/02/2016 11:32, Chris Sherlock wrote:
On 3 Feb 2016, at 7:24 PM, SOS <sos@pmg.be> wrote:
On 3/02/2016 3:55, Kohei Yoshida wrote:
On Wed, 2016-02-03 at 10:52 +1100, Chris Sherlock wrote:
The other question is: why would we not want to the actual DPI and
screen resolution?
My understanding is that, historically, the OS provided a function to
query DPI but what gets returned from such function was not always
accurate (or always not accurate depending on who you ask). So, the
workaround at the time was to assume that DPI is always 96 (and
hard-code that value) regardless of what the OS told you, which worked
just fine because the monitors used back in the day had the same screen
resolution.
Mostly DPI is found in the header of a pixelfile (taken by camera). Unfortunately it's not the
photographer who gets to decide about the needed DPI.
DPI is actually a wrong definition for documents, Dots Per Inch is a definition used by output
devices. Screens need a PIXEL par DOT but for print devices there is no precise correlation
between the number of dots used by the device and the pixels needed in the image for having a
maximum image-view quality.
The print industry has come to some standards by trial and error.
- monitor screens need 96 - (220-retina) pixels per inch
- laser printers need 150 pixels per inch (up tot 2000 + dots)
- offset printers need 254 -300 pixels per inch (up to 3000 dots)
Definitely true :-) Only in OS X’s case, it doesn’t actually report back the correct resolution
unless you ask for the backing coordinate system.
The PPI business is a red herring I think I’ve introduced into this discussion I’m afraid. We
calculate the PPI ourselves (and call it DPI) based on the reported pixels, and the size of the
screen in mm (which we obviously convert to inches).
its a bit the wrong discussion: what we see on screen has no relevance: the user can "zoom" the
document until he is happy with the image quality on screen
But in the current situation, LO users has no idea how big (size) he can place a image in a
document.
When the doc is intented for online use (email and Web) then there is a minimum of 96 pixels par
inch needed. More is no problem but is in many cases a overkill.
Who is editing a "book" or a "magazine" need minimal 254 pixels par inch to has a good image
quality after printing.
When using less pixels the book pages are looking fine on screen put shall have a creepy print
quality
So having a new "DocumentProperty" indicating the needed pixels (for printing) make it possible
to make the "size" calculations before inserting.
We are actually detecting the PPI… with the greatest of respect, I’ve actually implemented some
testing changes to detect the correct PPI and on my Mac is should actually be just over 200PPI…
I think this is going in the wrong direction. I worked for Epson about 13 years ago, so I have some
knowledge of printing :-) I could talk your ear off on colour management and halftoning, and I
probably know a bit too much about piezo-electric crystal technology…
I’m really trying to understand what is relying on the resolution and what sort of impact fixing
the resolution detection might be having on OS X systems.
Chris
Context
Re: DPI and screen resolution on OS X · Alexander Thurgood
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