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As display technologies advance, manufacturers have increased the number of pixels supported by their displays. While text, images, and user interface elements look much sharper and more readable on high resolution displays, the operating system must scale up to support the visual experience; otherwise, everything just looks smaller.
Windows 7 supports high DPI displays. Market data suggests that deployments of high DPI screens (120-144 dots per inch (dpi)) will increase in the Windows 7 timeframe. When running native resolutions on these screens, many applications appear very small unless they use High DPI. Some applications (such as Windows Internet Explorer) have font scaling features that allow users to zoom in and out, but many applications do not. The High DPI feature in Windows 7:
The WindowsDPI scaling feature scales fonts and user interface elements (such as buttons, icons, and input fields) by a calculated percentage, as specified by the DPI setting. This is different from the scaling that occurs when the display resolution is lowered. In the case of DPI scaling, Windows provides fonts and user interface elements that are drawn with more pixels, resulting in a larger, higher fidelity, and sharper Windows experience. Third-party Windows applications can leverage High DPI settings and adjust the user interface accordingly, by declaring themselves High DPI aware. Application developers should no longer assume that 96 dpi is the ideal resolution for all applications.
For more information about High DPI and about writing applications that are High DPI aware, see High DPI.
Events
May 19, 6 PM - May 23, 12 AM
Calling all developers, creators, and AI innovators to join us in Seattle @Microsoft Build May 19-22.
Register today