If this happens, you can choose to live with it (it harms nothing on the computer), or try a different setting. (A reboot would do as well.)ĭepending on your display type, you may find that some things look a little fuzzy after changing this setting to a non-“recommended” value. If an app or application doesn’t seem to have responded to the change, or appears to be misbehaving after the change, signing out and back in again is the first thing I would try. I’ve never actually had to sign out to have the size change display across the apps I happen to be running. When you make a change to this setting, Windows shows a message that says, “Some apps won’t respond to scaling changes until you sign out.” In my experience, those apps are few and far between. You can experiment and adjust the size to your taste. Note that the range available to you will depend on what your display is capable of, and the abilities exposed by the display device driver. When you release the mouse, most items on the display will resize to your new setting. Using the left mouse button, click, hold and drag that slider to the right to make things bigger, or to the left to make things smaller. “Recommended” simply means Windows has determined this setting to be optimal for your display type items display with the least amount of distortion due to scaling. Near the center of that page is a slider labelled “Change the size of text, apps, and other items”, set to some default value. This will bring up the Settings app, opened to the “Customize your display” page. Right-click on an empty area of the desktop and click on Display Settings in the resulting popup menu. There have always been ways to adjust the size of items displayed, but they’ve been somewhat obscure and occasionally something less than reliable. A common request (or complaint) is that text or other items on the screen are too small to be seen clearly.
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