Questions and Answers :
Unix/Linux :
Boinc v5.1.8 tiny font size
Message board moderation
Author | Message |
---|---|
groucho Send message Joined: 30 Aug 01 Posts: 30 Credit: 84,295 RAC: 0 |
Hi all, I'm using the last boincmgr available, version 5.1.8. But the font size it's using is so small that I can barely read it. Do you know how I can fix that? thanks G Military intelligence is a contradiction in terms (Groucho Marx) at |
groucho Send message Joined: 30 Aug 01 Posts: 30 Credit: 84,295 RAC: 0 |
I still have the same problem with 5.2.1. Anyone can help? Thanks |
Brian Foster Send message Joined: 15 Feb 02 Posts: 3 Credit: 78,867 RAC: 0 |
After classic was turned off, I finally switched to boinc (5.2.13) and am now using it, mostly successfully ... but have exactly the same problem: The font size is way to small to be legible. This is on SUSE 9.1 (Linux). Anyone have any clews how to make the boincmgr usable to people with less-than-perfect vision? |
Scarecrow Send message Joined: 15 Jul 00 Posts: 4520 Credit: 486,601 RAC: 0 |
I don't know how helpful this will be, but I ran into a similar problem some time ago that effected all GTK based apps. It also effects boincmgr. This is what corrected the small font problem for me on a Debian machine. The fix was in the .gtkrc file. It can be in the user's home directory as .gtkrc, or if it doesn't exist for a given user, /etc/gtk directory as gtkrc. The /etc/gtk directory on Debian contains many configuration files and gtkrc is a symbolic link to one of those many others. In my case, gtkrc is a symlink to gtkrc.iso-8859-15, also in the /etc/gtk directory. I'm afraid I don't recall how things were linked or set up when the small font problem was occuring, but making gtkrc.iso-8859-15 the 'file to use' made things quite readable in all apps. Also, making manual changes to the font definitions in gtkrc will provide some relief, but require a little more of a learning curve. The exact locations of the GTK related files may vary from system to system, and some may even have some sort of automated means of selecting the config file to use. So it will take a little snooping around to find where and how things should be done. Google will likely come in handy. This may not be the magic bullet, but at least in my situation the need for the 'coke bottle bottom' glasses was eliminated by making the changes to gtkrc. Hope this provides a little help. |
©2024 University of California
SETI@home and Astropulse are funded by grants from the National Science Foundation, NASA, and donations from SETI@home volunteers. AstroPulse is funded in part by the NSF through grant AST-0307956.