Is there a way to fake a larger resolution so I can see the bottom of Codex?
- KVRAF
- 4287 posts since 6 Nov, 2009
The very bottom is cut off on my small laptop screen. Surely there's a way to fake a larger resolution and scroll? FLS takes up a ton of screen space, even with "detached" activated.
- KVRAF
- Topic Starter
- 4287 posts since 6 Nov, 2009
I think I found my own answer.
http://ynea.futureware.at/cgi-bin/infinite_screen.pl
http://ynea.futureware.at/cgi-bin/infinite_screen.pl
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- KVRAF
- 3508 posts since 27 Dec, 2002 from North East England
Unfortunately Windows only seems to let you scale the display to be larger AFAIK. Seems like an odd omission. Anyone know any registry hacks to enable scaling things smaller perhaps?
The only other way I can think of doing it will only work if you have a semi-recent Nvidia graphics card. Cards from the 400 series or later are capable of it, but you might need to upgrade to the latest driver as the feature was only added a year or two back. There's an option in Nvidia Control Panel called 'Dynamic Super Resolution' that lets you set resolutions higher than your monitor can handle which are then downscaled to fit your display. It's intended to be used as an antialiasing solution for 3D games, but it works on the desktop too. You need to enable it in Nvidia Control Panel and pick some scaling factors first, then higher resolutions will become available for selection in your standard Windows display options.
The only other way I can think of doing it will only work if you have a semi-recent Nvidia graphics card. Cards from the 400 series or later are capable of it, but you might need to upgrade to the latest driver as the feature was only added a year or two back. There's an option in Nvidia Control Panel called 'Dynamic Super Resolution' that lets you set resolutions higher than your monitor can handle which are then downscaled to fit your display. It's intended to be used as an antialiasing solution for 3D games, but it works on the desktop too. You need to enable it in Nvidia Control Panel and pick some scaling factors first, then higher resolutions will become available for selection in your standard Windows display options.
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- KVRAF
- 3508 posts since 27 Dec, 2002 from North East England
Ah, good stuff!arkmabat wrote:I think I found my own answer.
http://ynea.futureware.at/cgi-bin/infinite_screen.pl