• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

Dumb question about screen resolution

Cappuccino

Diamond Member
I have a 1440p monitor.

1.) I download 1080p desktop wallpaper - Will I see the picture in 1080p or 1440p? And how do I know if the picture is 1440 or 1080 or even 4k?

2.) I download 4k wallpaper will I see the picture in 4k or 1440p?

3.) I download 1080p or 4k pic will it just automatically convert the wallpaper to my original resolution which is 1440p?

Dunno why this is confusing I am curious and would liek to know the answers 🙂

I am dumb. I like small cats.
 
Last edited:
a) Depending on how you set the background picture to show, you'll either see it upscaled to 1440p ("fit", "stretch" or "fill" modes), or at 1080p with a border ("center").

b) Either open the picture in a program meant for viewing pictures and view the metadata there (in Windows 10's Pictures you right click the image and click "File info"), or right click the file, open the file properties, and click the Details tab. Resolution should be under the Image heading, not quite at the top.

c) See a). Center will show you a cropped full resolution image, the others a shrunken version.

d) Yes, if you choose the correct settings. See a).

No questions are dumb. Not asking questions is what is dumb 😉
 
a) Depending on how you set the background picture to show, you'll either see it upscaled to 1440p ("fit", "stretch" or "fill" modes), or at 1080p with a border ("center").

b) Either open the picture in a program meant for viewing pictures and view the metadata there (in Windows 10's Pictures you right click the image and click "File info"), or right click the file, open the file properties, and click the Details tab. Resolution should be under the Image heading, not quite at the top.

c) See a). Center will show you a cropped full resolution image, the others a shrunken version.

d) Yes, if you choose the correct settings. See a).

No questions are dumb. Not asking questions is what is dumb 😉
Thank you Valantar! 10/10
 
Back
Top