The screen above would be 2.3 megapixels, but we generally don’t refer to display devices that way. If you do the math, the screen has 2,304,000 pixels - a little over 2.3 million.Ĭamera people like to call numbers like that megapixels. That’s referred to as the resolution of the device: a measure of how many pixels the device is capable of displaying. The rectangle is so many pixels wide (horizontally) and so many pixels high (vertically).įor example, one screen I use is a rectangle that is 1,920 pixels wide and 1,200 pixels high, or simply “1920 × 1200”. We can do things with that dot, like give it a color, and I’ll get to that in a moment, but at its most fundamental level, a pixel is nothing more than a single dot.Ĭomputer display devices, like the screen on which you’re reading this, is nothing but a rectangle of pixels. PixelĪ pixel (short for “picture element”) is a dot. We’ll start by defining two terms: pixel and resolution. You can make images smaller by resizing, cropping, and/or adjusting compression settings. When you share an image that is too big in terms of resolution, it can be awkward for the recipient to view. Sharing a file that is too big in terms of file size can result in long or slow page displays and downloads, or email being rejected for being too large. The relationship between the two is affected by both lossy and lossless compression algorithms used when saving the image. Another measure of size is the amount of space in bytes required to store the file of the image on disk. I've tweaked the Fusion Dark settings with the panels where I want, but I hate the colors.įor now, I'm going to live with it, but Themes seems to be one of those things in XnViewMP that need some work.One measure of size is an image’s resolution, which measures pixels (or dots) horizontally and vertically 1920 × 1200 pixels, for example. The screen resolution on both systems is the same 1920 x 1080. And further investigation indicates the icons in the theme are not being used. All the sizes, particularly the icons, are fluey and I've tried over and over to get it the same and cannot. I copied all the setup files from my desktop computer, just like I did last time, and this time, its hosed. I had copied those settings to my laptop, a Dell XPS-13 with good success.Īnywho, I did a scorched earth Windows reinstall on the laptop due to other reasons. Somehow, don't really know how actually, I got the theme to work to my liking on my desktop computer. Just make sure there are no settings files left. My suggestion is to delete and/or backup your existing install and start from scratch. <- (The same OS I had the original problem with.) The only real difference was I installed xnviewmp fresh on both of these machines, whereas the machine I had the problem with had xnviewmp installed for many years before adding the theme. One was a Windows 10 machine, the other was arch linux. I've installed this theme on two machines since I first had this problem and didn't have trouble with either. I wish the dev would take this over and make it part of the core as a dark theme option. It's still useable, but it was near perfection before. ![]() Some of the latest updates have broken some of the theme graphics and he hasn't posted any fixes. ![]() Thus, I have tried to create a low contrast, mid-grey theme that wouldn't distract users from the actual content. When a theme is too dark, I find it worse readable and I tend to adjust my creations too dark as well. I think, when a theme is too light/colorful, it glows to the eyes and distracts user from the actual content. This theme is neither too dark, nor too light, which I believe is the best choice in general. So, I've got inspired by the default grey theme from Blender, which I like so much. I'm a big fan of Blender (open-source 3D package), which I think has one of the best and most flexible/modifiable user interfaces. Of course, sometimes it's a bit of puzzle to get what you want, but that's part of the fun Indeed, XnViewMP starts and responds really fast without any lagging, and the possibilities of UI customization using the QSS style sheets are just brilliant! I really enjoyed making this QSS style to my liking. First of all, great thanks to the authors of this amazing photo manager! I was very excited to find this Qt based program, which just proves that the Qt framework is a perfect choice for multi-platform user programs.
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