Wednesday, November 18, PM. Monday, December 21, PM. Thursday, November 19, AM. Best regards Please remember to mark the replies as answers if they help, and unmark the answers if they provide no help. Monday, November 23, AM. Is there any fix on Windows side about this issue? Wednesday, November 25, PM. Not that I know. I first thought that the font was bad, so I restored the previous font but it was the same result. Another software that I have that renders the hyphen incorrectly is X-Lite.
Thursday, November 26, PM. Friday, November 27, AM. Nice try as a workaround, but that's not acceptable for me. Does Microsoft plan to fix this font issue in a coming update? But as pointed out by SebMeunier1 this is not acceptable. Saturday, November 28, AM. Monday, November 30, AM. In order to reproduce, follow the following steps: Open Registry Editor. And also change the following registry keys: Open Registry Editor. Set FontSmoothingType to 1. Set FontSmoothing to 1. This has worked for all the version of Windows I used since Windows 7.
Monday, November 30, PM. Tuesday, December 1, AM. I know that I'm doing something fishy but Microsoft keeps changing the way they render fonts and it is worse and worse. But it could also be a bug and no one at Microsoft noticed it because they use the default setting and rendering. Tuesday, December 1, PM. In the Size list, choose a text size, and then choose the OK button Best regards Please remember to mark the replies as answers if they help, and unmark the answers if they provide no help.
Thursday, December 3, AM. Thanks for the tip. The workaround you provided works for the font within Visual Studio, the only part where it does not work is the title bar. I'm not marking this as answer because many other applications are affected by the change in the way fonts are rendered within Windows.
Tuesday, December 8, PM. Any idea regarding the registry keys to update? Hi SebMeunier1, According to my test, it is obvious that the issue is related to the specific application.
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Windows 11 Default Browser. A nerd font patcher would be cool considering the amount of time I spend for getting this python conda env symbol working properly:. EDIT : I know that this is not related to rendering fonts. I was just giving a suggestion. Tell me if I need to open a new issue for this. There is an open-source project that fixes the rendering.
I personally love mactype. However, mactype is not native, blurry in some places, and crashes many software. This would be amazing! I have tried to use mactype on many different occasions too many to count. What would be awesome is to get a font option that removes all the ClearType and anti-aliasing that causes what I perceive as a blurriness to fonts in order to get crisp clear edges on the font like Windows XP or when doing an RDP session to an old server.
With Windows 7 I used to be able to do this with various tricks but since Windows 10 I haven't been able to do this. Even MacType doesn't do it. And the others are regarding more granular control over fonts, which is possible today but not supported in the Windows Shell.
Since you closed and asked me to add comments here, I will gladly do that. Similar to , I wrote:. People with low vision can manage fonts in a couple of different ways on Windows, including by changing their "Display Resolution" in Display Settings and by "Making text bigger" in Ease of Access Settings.
However, these Settings do not enable users to adjust specific font sizes such as: Title bar, Menu, Message box, Secondary title, Icon or Status bar, which Windows used to support and can be adjusted independently with 3P apps. Similarly, 3P OSs and apps enable users to select Bold fonts for these same elements.
They enable users to substitute their preferred font for the system font. They also enable users to save and to import and export font profiles. In addition to being great for accessibility, this would be a great feature for power users that want to personalize their Windows experience. Perhaps just reactive , which was a new feature request for a UX to be able to manipulate the system fonts.
Jay-o-Way , thanks for the link, I am looking for an app that does just this.
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