Bug 234891

Summary: Compare Editor with High Contrast clips title
Product: [Eclipse Project] Platform Reporter: Chris Goldthorpe <cgold>
Component: TeamAssignee: Platform Team Inbox <platform-team-inbox>
Status: NEW --- QA Contact:
Severity: minor    
Priority: P3 CC: pawel.pogorzelski1, tomasz.zarna
Version: 3.4   
Target Milestone: ---   
Hardware: PC   
OS: Linux   
Whiteboard:
Attachments:
Description Flags
Screenshot none

Description Chris Goldthorpe CLA 2008-05-30 13:25:37 EDT
I20080526-2000

On RHEL I set the application font size to 28, which is the same as is used by some high contrast themes. There is clipping of text in the title area of the compare editor, see screenshot.
Comment 1 Chris Goldthorpe CLA 2008-05-30 13:26:16 EDT
Created attachment 102910 [details]
Screenshot
Comment 2 Tomasz Zarna CLA 2008-06-02 04:42:25 EDT
Chris, do you remember which font size you changed? I went on "General > Appearance > Colors and Font" and tried most of them, but didn't get anything similar to the thing you have. I did this on both Windows and Linux-GTK.
Comment 3 Chris Goldthorpe CLA 2008-06-02 19:43:53 EDT
Yes, I changed the font called "Application". I'm using the IBM open client which is based on RHEL5. I see some clipping on Windows also in High Contrast mode.
Comment 4 Pawel Pogorzelski CLA 2008-10-09 09:42:47 EDT
I think in Windows this font is controlled by OS and you cannot override it in Eclipse preferences. But enabling High Contrast like Chris wrote makes the problem appears.
Comment 5 Eclipse Webmaster CLA 2019-09-06 16:07:59 EDT
This bug hasn't had any activity in quite some time. Maybe the problem got resolved, was a duplicate of something else, or became less pressing for some reason - or maybe it's still relevant but just hasn't been looked at yet.

If you have further information on the current state of the bug, please add it. The information can be, for example, that the problem still occurs, that you still want the feature, that more information is needed, or that the bug is (for whatever reason) no longer relevant.