Difference between revisions of "Adjust the Display With xgamma and xrandr"

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Sadly, this page is just copied from the Linux [[How Do I: A Linux Q&A]] page for now.  Details on these commands will be added in the future.
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xrandr:
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The command structure is xrandr --output displayname --brightness brightness where displayname is the connected display that you have chosen from the list that you get with the command xrandr -q | grep " connected"and brightness is a value of your choosing (1 being the default). Values above 2 will wash things out to the point of being virtually unreadable, and values of .1 or below aren't recommended either.
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xgamma:
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Sadly, some of this page is just copied from the Linux [[How Do I: A Linux Q&A]] page for now.  Details on these commands will be added in the future.
  
 
== [DISPLAY RESOLUTIONS AVAILABLE FOR MONITOR OR SET FROM COMMAND LINE] ==
 
== [DISPLAY RESOLUTIONS AVAILABLE FOR MONITOR OR SET FROM COMMAND LINE] ==

Revision as of 00:51, 13 January 2020

xrandr:

The command structure is xrandr --output displayname --brightness brightness where displayname is the connected display that you have chosen from the list that you get with the command xrandr -q | grep " connected"and brightness is a value of your choosing (1 being the default). Values above 2 will wash things out to the point of being virtually unreadable, and values of .1 or below aren't recommended either.

xgamma:

Sadly, some of this page is just copied from the Linux How Do I: A Linux Q&A page for now. Details on these commands will be added in the future.

[DISPLAY RESOLUTIONS AVAILABLE FOR MONITOR OR SET FROM COMMAND LINE]

Use the xrandr command. Xrandr is used to set the size, orientation and/or reflection of the outputs for a screen. It can also set the screen size.

If you type 'xrandr' and ENTER you will see info about your current display. See if you are using something like VGA-1, DVI-0, HDMI-1, DP-1, etc etc <- examples only

DO NOT TYPE: xgamma --output VGA-1 --brightness 0 (substitute VGA-1) for your display, this will make your screen black and you will see nothing. Here is a working example:

xrandr --output VGA-1 --brightness 0.75

Learn more

man xrandr

[ADJUST DISPLAY CONTRAST AND TINT FROM COMMAND LINE]

You can Adjust the Display With xgamma and xrandr from the command line. See xrandr above.

xrandr --output VGA-1 --gamma 1:1:1

Use the xgamma command. A gamma value of 1.0 is the default. A gamma value of 0.8 would give you more contrast. A value of 1.4 would be much less contrast. Example usage:

xgamma -gamma 0.8

xgamma - Alter a monitor's gamma correction through the X server. The gamma correction can either be defined as a single value, or separately for the red, green and blue components. Also: -rgamma -ggamma -bgamma

Learn more

man xgamma

testing

$ xgamma
-> Red  0.700, Green  0.700, Blue  0.700
$ xrandr --output VGA-1 --gamma 1.5:1.5:1.5
$ xgamma
-> Red  0.700, Green  0.700, Blue  0.700
$ xrandr --output VGA-1 --brightness 0.5
$ xgamma
-> Red  0.700, Green  0.700, Blue  0.700
$ xgamma -gamma .9
-> Red  0.700, Green  0.700, Blue  0.700
<- Red  0.900, Green  0.900, Blue  0.900

Restore default

xrandr --output VGA-1 --gamma 1:1:1 --brightness 1.0

eye strain relief

The full brightness setting is:

xrandr --output VGA-1 --gamma 1:1:1 --brightness 1.0

The nighttime setting is:

xrandr --output VGA-1 --gamma 1.1:0.8:0.7 --brightness 0.55