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Change DPI in Linux using command line | 2021-11-10T09:48:47Z | 2022-04-29T09:48:47Z | false |
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Using a DE is pretty straightforward but you might be out of luck if you use something like dwm.
Find correct DPI of your display currently used by X server
xdpyinfo | grep -B2 resolution
This si probably the correct value. If not, you can calculate it by converting your screen size to inches and dividing the resolution by display length.
xrandr | grep -w connected
{{% center %}} {{% figure src="/img/xrandr.png" title="The output on my machine" alt="Output of the last command" %}} {{% /center %}}
The above block spits your screen resolution and physical size. Now divide it by display length in inches.
Create/modify the file ~/.Xresources
and append the following line (replace 96 with your DPI)
Xft.dpi: 96
and have it processed by the startup file (like .xinitrc)
xrdb -merge ~/.Xresources