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#76
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Calculating the aspect ratio
On 6/7/19 6:11 PM, Paul wrote:
Ken Springer wrote: On 6/7/19 2:21 PM, nospam wrote: In article , Paul wrote: LCDs work best at native resolution. that does not apply when the pixel size is smaller than what the eye can resolve, as it is with hi-dpi displays. I would not be thinking about "aspect ratio" with an LCD monitor, because good options are pretty limited. different aspect ratios means either letterboxing, stretching one dimension to fit or clipping, none of which look good. Not if the other chosen aspect ratio is the same as the native resolution. There are two settings. You set the resolution to "native", on the understanding the monitor has square pixels. This is the sharpest setting. Any other corrections will be done elsewhere. Good so far. Now, your 4K monitor is making the print really really small. What 4K monitor? I ain't got one of them... LOL And I don't know anyone that does. You reach for the percentage control and set the screen to 200%. This causes the OS to make desktop objects twice as big, which compensates for the higher resolution of the display, and makes things easier to see again. https://i.postimg.cc/50kQkT9c/window...nt-setting.gif My WinXP screen is set to 125% I think, and it's not all that big of a screen either. I don't really know what percentage settings are possible on each OS, or make sense. I thought the notion of HiDPI was at least 200% or so. I have my XP machine at 100%, which works fine. But Windows 7 and older had far more customizing options than W8 and after. For me, I don't need bigger icons, just bigger text. MS so helpfully removed that from W10, but now some of it has returned. But the user's options to customize the desktop and OS are not as robust as they used to be. These are things you can play with at the computer store. What's a computer store????? G The only problem here is, the last store that had such a collection of displays, isn't in business any more. And the remaining stores are "cheap" when it comes to such issues. Not nearly the same opportunity for playing. There's a Micro Center I could go to, but it's about 3 hours away. -- Ken MacOS 10.14.5 Firefox 67.0 Thunderbird 60.7 "My brain is like lightning, a quick flash and it's gone!" |
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#77
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Calculating the aspect ratio
In article , Ken Springer
wrote: If I had all the money in the world, that's what I'd buy. And I'd have bought a Power Mac, rather than the cheapest Mac Mini Apple has! LOL powermacs were discontinued more than ten years ago, and can be found used for relatively cheap. I probably wrote Power Mac because I have one, 6400. It was my mother's first computer, and except for the monitor, it still runs. that was not one of their better models, although you could connect a vga display and pretend it's 1996 all over again. |
#78
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Calculating the aspect ratio
Ken Springer wrote:
I have my XP machine at 100%, which works fine. But Windows 7 and older had far more customizing options than W8 and after. For me, I don't need bigger icons, just bigger text. MS so helpfully removed that from W10, but now some of it has returned. But the user's options to customize the desktop and OS are not as robust as they used to be. I thought there was some tweaker that brought those settings back ? https://www.ghacks.net/2017/04/12/sy...eators-update/ There's one called Advanced System Font Changer too. ******* https://www.tenforums.com/general-su...nt-larger.html * How to Change Text Size of Icons in Windows 10 * How to Change Text Size for Menus in Windows 10 * How to Change Text Size for Message Boxes in Windows 10 * How to Change Text Size for Title Bars in Windows 10 * How to Change Text Size for Tooltips in Windows 10 I think these are intended to duplicate what used to be there, but the problem with Windows 10 is, it's a moving target, and just because there's a list, doesn't mean any of them work now. Paul |
#79
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Calculating the aspect ratio
On 6/7/19 9:07 PM, Paul wrote:
Ken Springer wrote: I have my XP machine at 100%, which works fine. But Windows 7 and older had far more customizing options than W8 and after. For me, I don't need bigger icons, just bigger text. MS so helpfully removed that from W10, but now some of it has returned. But the user's options to customize the desktop and OS are not as robust as they used to be. I thought there was some tweaker that brought those settings back ? https://www.ghacks.net/2017/04/12/sy...eators-update/ There's one called Advanced System Font Changer too. They are the same program, I've forgotten what the difference is. While the program changes some things, it doesn't fully replace those items that were removed. ******* https://www.tenforums.com/general-su...nt-larger.html * How to Change Text Size of Icons in Windows 10 * How to Change Text Size for Menus in Windows 10 * How to Change Text Size for Message Boxes in Windows 10 * How to Change Text Size for Title Bars in Windows 10 * How to Change Text Size for Tooltips in Windows 10 I think these are intended to duplicate what used to be there, The screenshots are all from the program(s) above but the problem with Windows 10 is, it's a moving target, and just because there's a list, doesn't mean any of them work now. That moving target crap is part of the problem. You'll run into a user now and again that says "Why should I learn how to do it, they are just going to change it anyway." And, it's a valid point. All MS does with that idea is waste people's time in the long run. If I was a business, I'd sure get tired of my productive time being turned into nonproductive time. In another message, I commented a new monitor had just arrived. I'm using that monitor right now, and I have to say, it's so nice to be able to read things again using many default settings I had changed to fit me better. I am fortunate in this area. For the lady for whom I've tweaked her system, messages in Gmail physically measure a quarter inch tall. And still, for somethings, she has to get out a magnifying glass. It's Windows 7, and I've tweaked everything I can to make it easier for her I can. It's been awhile, but I think I changed the magnification of the display (the 100%, 125% or 150% options) and the change resolution idea we're discussing here. But there's a practical limit there, too. All of a sudden, web pages are no longer practical to use because you are constantly having to scroll all over the damned place to read them. It's like going back to an old 14" CRT. Who designs web pages for a monitor like that anymore? :-( -- Ken MacOS 10.14.5 Firefox 67.0 Thunderbird 60.7 "My brain is like lightning, a quick flash and it's gone!" |
#80
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Calculating the aspect ratio
On Fri, 07 Jun 2019 11:35:56 -0700, Ken Blake
wrote: On Fri, 7 Jun 2019 10:10:28 -0600, Ken Springer wrote: [snip] I don't know why people had to change the name. LOL To improve it. cough, cough Actually, the split of grades is somewhat arbitrary so it is not surprising to see various different splits. Presumably because Jr High School and Middle School are not the same. Jr High School was grades 7, 8, and 9, and Middle School is grades 6, 7, and 8. In my neck of the woods (British Columbia), junior high school is grades 8 to 10, and senior high is grades 11 and 12. At least that's my experience with those names. I suppose it's possible that their meaning may vary in some locations. Yup! We also had elementary (grades 1 to 7) and a subsplit of -- I think it was this -- primary (grades 1 to 3) and intermediate (grades 4 to 7). Sincerely, Gene Wirchenko |
#81
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Calculating the aspect ratio
On Fri, 7 Jun 2019 13:29:59 -0600, Ken Springer
wrote: On 6/7/19 12:54 PM, Gene Wirchenko wrote: On Fri, 7 Jun 2019 09:15:20 -0600, Ken Springer wrote: [snip] Correct, ratios and proportions are grade school math. But writing a mathematical formula to do it with just inputting 2 variables, apparently is not. G It is not a formula. You solve it using Euclid's Algorithm which calculates the Greatest Common Divisor of two numbers. Then, divide each original value by the GCD to get the simplified ratio. Do you think that's how Mr. Hedges is doing it on his website? I do not know. Since I have not seen mention of Euclid's Algorithm by anyone else or seen it code, I suspect not. Sincerely, Gene Wirchenko |
#82
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Calculating the aspect ratio
In article , Gene Wirchenko
wrote: I don't know why people had to change the name. LOL To improve it. cough, cough no cough needed. that's what they did. it's more than just a name change. Actually, the split of grades is somewhat arbitrary so it is not surprising to see various different splits. it's not arbitrary. |
#83
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Calculating the aspect ratio
On 6/9/2019 10:03 PM, Gene Wirchenko wrote:
On Fri, 7 Jun 2019 13:29:59 -0600, Ken Springer wrote: On 6/7/19 12:54 PM, Gene Wirchenko wrote: On Fri, 7 Jun 2019 09:15:20 -0600, Ken Springer wrote: [snip] Correct, ratios and proportions are grade school math. But writing a mathematical formula to do it with just inputting 2 variables, apparently is not. G It is not a formula. You solve it using Euclid's Algorithm which calculates the Greatest Common Divisor of two numbers. Then, divide each original value by the GCD to get the simplified ratio. Do you think that's how Mr. Hedges is doing it on his website? I do not know. Since I have not seen mention of Euclid's Algorithm by anyone else or seen it code, I suspect not. Sincerely, Gene Wirchenko http://mathworld.wolfram.com/EuclideanAlgorithm.html https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euclidean_algorithm -- Please judge your ancestors by how well the lived up to their standards not yours. They did not know your standards, so could not try to meet them. |
#84
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Calculating the aspect ratio
Gene Wirchenko wrote:
On Fri, 7 Jun 2019 13:29:59 -0600, Ken Springer wrote: On 6/7/19 12:54 PM, Gene Wirchenko wrote: On Fri, 7 Jun 2019 09:15:20 -0600, Ken Springer wrote: [snip] Correct, ratios and proportions are grade school math. But writing a mathematical formula to do it with just inputting 2 variables, apparently is not. G It is not a formula. You solve it using Euclid's Algorithm which calculates the Greatest Common Divisor of two numbers. Then, divide each original value by the GCD to get the simplified ratio. Do you think that's how Mr. Hedges is doing it on his website? I do not know. Since I have not seen mention of Euclid's Algorithm by anyone else or seen it code, I suspect not. Sincerely, Gene Wirchenko I could rework something like this and see how much more efficient it is. This particular one is recursive (which I know Ken would hate because "it isn't closed form"). https://rosettacode.org/wiki/Greates...on_divisor#AWK That web page also mentions "Stein's Algorithm". And that's the beauty of stepwise refinement - the rosettacode site has a ton of implementations, and for some problem types, you can see the obvious superiority of some of the languages for the task. Awk is a miserable language at the best of times, but some wizard managed to make a one-liner out of this problem. The tough part for me now, will be sliding a counter into it, to count divisions, without breaking it :-) And it looks very efficient, compared to mine. No more than 7 recursive calls in some test values so far. function gcd(p,q){ call++ return(q?gcd(q,(p%q))) } { print gcd($1,$2) print "number of calls " call call = 0 } Paul |
#85
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Calculating the aspect ratio
On 6/7/19 12:45 PM, Char Jackson wrote:
On Fri, 7 Jun 2019 10:48:21 -0600, Ken Springer wrote: On 6/7/19 10:43 AM, Mayayana wrote: "Ken Springer" wrote snip If you have Excel, you can use something like this: =$D1/GCD($D1,$D2) & ":" & $D2/GCD($D1,$D2) HI, Char, Sorry for the late reply, other irons in the fire got in the way. The formula did indeed work in the spreadsheet I'm using. I still need to see if the spreadsheet I'm using has some type of "If, Then, Else" option to cover the situation where 16:10 ends up being 8:5, as was mentioned by Paul. snip -- Ken MacOS 10.14.5 Firefox 67.0.4 Thunderbird 60.7 "My brain is like lightning, a quick flash and it's gone!" |
#86
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Calculating the aspect ratio
On Thu, 20 Jun 2019 16:33:09 -0600, Ken Springer wrote:
On 6/7/19 12:45 PM, Char Jackson wrote: On Fri, 7 Jun 2019 10:48:21 -0600, Ken Springer wrote: On 6/7/19 10:43 AM, Mayayana wrote: "Ken Springer" wrote snip If you have Excel, you can use something like this: =$D1/GCD($D1,$D2) & ":" & $D2/GCD($D1,$D2) HI, Char, Sorry for the late reply, other irons in the fire got in the way. The formula did indeed work in the spreadsheet I'm using. I still need to see if the spreadsheet I'm using has some type of "If, Then, Else" option to cover the situation where 16:10 ends up being 8:5, as was mentioned by Paul. snip In Excel, I might use the =IF formula, which gives me this: =IF($D1/GCD($D1,$D2)&":"&$D2/GCD($D1,$D2)="8:5","16:10",$D1/GCD($D1,$D2)&":"&$D2/GCD($D1,$D2)) The commas separate the three fields. The first field is the logical test. It asks the question, is the result of the formula "8:5"? The second field is "if yes, do this": Display the result as "16:10" The third field tells what to display if the logical test fails, which is simply a restatement of the original formula. It gets a bit unwieldy for humans, especially if you end up nesting multiple IF tests. |
#87
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Calculating the aspect ratio
On 6/20/19 8:51 PM, Char Jackson wrote:
On Thu, 20 Jun 2019 16:33:09 -0600, Ken Springer wrote: On 6/7/19 12:45 PM, Char Jackson wrote: On Fri, 7 Jun 2019 10:48:21 -0600, Ken Springer wrote: On 6/7/19 10:43 AM, Mayayana wrote: "Ken Springer" wrote snip If you have Excel, you can use something like this: =$D1/GCD($D1,$D2) & ":" & $D2/GCD($D1,$D2) HI, Char, Sorry for the late reply, other irons in the fire got in the way. The formula did indeed work in the spreadsheet I'm using. I still need to see if the spreadsheet I'm using has some type of "If, Then, Else" option to cover the situation where 16:10 ends up being 8:5, as was mentioned by Paul. snip In Excel, I might use the =IF formula, which gives me this: =IF($D1/GCD($D1,$D2)&":"&$D2/GCD($D1,$D2)="8:5","16:10",$D1/GCD($D1,$D2)&":"&$D2/GCD($D1,$D2)) The commas separate the three fields. The first field is the logical test. It asks the question, is the result of the formula "8:5"? The second field is "if yes, do this": Display the result as "16:10" The third field tells what to display if the logical test fails, which is simply a restatement of the original formula. It gets a bit unwieldy for humans, especially if you end up nesting multiple IF tests. Exactly where I was going to go, I just have to check the manual to make sure the syntax is the same. And yes, my program has a PDF manual available for download. G -- Ken MacOS 10.14.5 Firefox 67.0.4 Thunderbird 60.7 "My brain is like lightning, a quick flash and it's gone!" |
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