Thursday, May 10, 2012

Anti aliasing enabled in Internet Explorer


Anti aliasing enabled in Internet Explorer Currently I am using Anti aliasing 11.11. If I configure AA to 16X broad tent, scrolling pages within IE9 causes them to blur, and augment blurring with further scrolling. It as well can cause entire areas of web pages to turn black. If I configure AA to application controlled it doesn't come about. Reply With Quote #2 Old 22-11-2011 Rhesa Rhesa is offline Member Join Date: Nov 2010 Posts: 353 Re: Anti aliasing enabled in Internet Explorer I think that these settings simply apply to 3D rendering. They have no consequence at whichever additional time. The truth that it is getting an effect in non 3D surroundings is a indication that something is incorrect. Reply With Quote #3 Old 22-11-2011 Suigetsu Suigetsu is offline Member Join Date: Mar 2011 Posts: 439 Re: Anti aliasing enabled in Internet Explorer As it appears on the Windows interface, certain programs are not to blame. And since they disappear when activated by anti-aliasing, no thermal problem is likely behind it (because it would increase the error earlier). Maybe a memory module is malfunctioning? Possibly. in activated As other addresses will be used? Are the Radeon tools here to test the hardware at fault? Reply With Quote #4 Old 22-11-2011 Chopfyt Chopfyt is offline Member Join Date: Mar 2011 Posts: 374 Re: Anti aliasing enabled in Internet Explorer The idea is brilliant, the "symptoms" are the ones, but where is the option in IE to remove the effect? Because it occurs only here ... while in the rest of the programs do not. However it was also my first idea, that the installation had ClearType enabled, but is still checking off Reply With Quote #5 Old 22-11-2011 Cauvery Cauvery is offline Member Join Date: May 2011 Posts: 303 Re: Anti aliasing enabled in Internet Explorer For smaller sizes at the source, it is best to use a good font designed especially for the screen, to have mercy on the grid of pixels on the monitor and not in conflict with it. For texts in HTML, do not have much choice in this matter. And only differs from a sailor to another depending on your computer. Where we have a little more freedom is to choose fonts to incorporate buttons or graphics. Type in 14 pixels on, usually they can apply an anti-alias satisfactorily. About 12 pixels and depends on the weight and design of the source itself. Less than that too complicated and it is best to choose a font for display without antialiasing. Reply With Quote #6 Old 22-11-2011 Deverell Deverell is offline Member Join Date: May 2011 Posts: 342 Re: Anti aliasing enabled in Internet Explorer After some research on the problem, here's what I learned: the core issue is that IE is based on DirectWrite for text rendering and not any of the newer rendition elections based, draw the text without anti-aliasing and respect the OS-wide default options of user would. The aggravation, if you disable ClearType in the OS, in some cases, IE falling back to non-performance is not direct writes - ClearType anti-aliasing, which is even flakier than ClearType. Reply With Quote #7 Old 22-11-2011 FarhaS FarhaS is offline Member Join Date: May 2011 Posts: 403 Re: Anti aliasing enabled in Internet Explorer That really shows the problem with which I had expected. Everyone thinks that the old view of "right" and that now there is a problem. But it's actually the other way, before the text was distorted and not now. Reply With Quote #8 Old 22-11-2011 Beatricef Beatricef is offline Member Join Date: May 2011 Posts: 314 Re: Anti aliasing enabled in Internet Explorer ClearType is optimized for good readability in low resolution ... example, it would make sense on a smartphone. DirectWrite places more value on the form display correctly ... which at low resolution but at the expense of readability.

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