Xterm Font Size Shortcut

Xterm Font Size Shortcut. And as always, xterm has solution for it. If you want to simply change the font size in a running gvim instance, type:

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Right click or press and hold on the title bar. You can then ask vim to print the line you would need to add to your ~/.gvimrc to make the change permanent: To change the size of the font add this to the ~/.xresources file:

Shift+Numpadminus = Decrease Font Size.


Shift+numpadplus = increase font size. To alter the font size ctrl+ brings up a menu with six font size options. Many terminal emulators that deal with wider fallback fonts (i.e.

You Can Then Ask Vim To Print The Line You Would Need To Add To Your ~/.Gvimrc To Make The Change Permanent:


Going to a bigger font, it got a 53x20 resize, then a 80x24 resize. There are seven font sizes, as can be seen with a ctrl + mouserightbutton on xterm. To change the size of the font add this to the ~/.xresources file:

If You Write Out This Line Without It, The Geometry Setting Will Affect Things Other Than The Size Of The Xterm.


A window should pop up letting you set font size as well as pick a new font if desired. I already wrote about xtermcontrol, but in my short usage of gnome terminal i noticed that having keyboard shortcuts for changing font size is really handy. Like, for example, the ctrl+click menu will be 80 pixels wide and 50 pixels tall, rendering it.

Use The Xfontsel Command (It's Horrible, I Know) To Choose Fonts.


Pressing [ctrl] key and the right mouse button simultaneously while you have focus in xterm window. I'm very particular about having an 80x50 terminal. The xterm font becomes the desired 8x13bold, a good choice;

If The Current Window Size Is 132X48, For Example, You Would Type:


Open a command prompt, elevated command prompt, powershell, elevated powershell, or linux console window you want using the shortcut or location you want to change the font and font size for. If you miss them, change to a font that supports them, for example, tiny. If you're using a fixed font it's done with xterm*font1 options, but for a truetype font add the following to your.xresources:!

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