How can I get my laptop's monitor size?
What is the Ubuntu linux command to find laptop monitor size? I want to know in inches if possible.
Thanks
monitor
add a comment |
What is the Ubuntu linux command to find laptop monitor size? I want to know in inches if possible.
Thanks
monitor
Hi user111, please see this: meta.askubuntu.com/q/15051/72216. Could you at least provide some feedback?
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 23 '16 at 20:51
add a comment |
What is the Ubuntu linux command to find laptop monitor size? I want to know in inches if possible.
Thanks
monitor
What is the Ubuntu linux command to find laptop monitor size? I want to know in inches if possible.
Thanks
monitor
monitor
edited Feb 18 '16 at 8:43
Jacob Vlijm
65.9k9130228
65.9k9130228
asked Feb 18 '16 at 7:47
user111user111
201149
201149
Hi user111, please see this: meta.askubuntu.com/q/15051/72216. Could you at least provide some feedback?
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 23 '16 at 20:51
add a comment |
Hi user111, please see this: meta.askubuntu.com/q/15051/72216. Could you at least provide some feedback?
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 23 '16 at 20:51
Hi user111, please see this: meta.askubuntu.com/q/15051/72216. Could you at least provide some feedback?
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 23 '16 at 20:51
Hi user111, please see this: meta.askubuntu.com/q/15051/72216. Could you at least provide some feedback?
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 23 '16 at 20:51
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
Another option, using xrandr
, is the command:
xrandr | grep ' connected'
Output:
DVI-I-1 connected primary 1680x1050+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 473mm x 296mm
VGA-1 connected 1280x1024+1680+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 376mm x 301mm
(mind the space before connected
, else disconnected
will be included)
Important differences between xdpyinfo
and xrandr
- While
xrandr
lists screens separately (in case of multiple monitors),xdpyinfo
outputs one single set of dimensions for all screens together ("desktop size" instead of screen size)
As noticed by @agold there is (quite) a difference between the two, which seems too big to be a simple rounding difference:
xrandr: 473mm x 296mm
xdpyinfo: 445x278
It seems related to a bug in xdpyinfo
. See also here.
If you'd insist on inches
Use the small script below; it outputs the size of your screen(s) in inches; width / height / diagonal (inches)
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import subprocess
# change the round factor if you like
r = 1
screens = [l.split()[-3:] for l in subprocess.check_output(
["xrandr"]).decode("utf-8").strip().splitlines() if " connected" in l]
for s in screens:
w = float(s[0].replace("mm", "")); h = float(s[2].replace("mm", "")); d = ((w**2)+(h**2))**(0.5)
print([round(n/25.4, r) for n in [w, h, d]])
To use it:
Copy the script into an empty file, save it as get_dimensions.py
, run it by the command:
python3 /path/to/get_dimensions.py
Output on my two screens:
width - height - diagonal (inches)
[18.6, 11.7, 22.0]
[14.8, 11.9, 19.0]
Edit
Fancy version of the same script (with a few improvements and a nicer output), looking like:
Screen width height diagonal
--------------------------------
DVI-I-1 18.6 11.7 22.0
VGA-1 14.8 11.9 19.0
The script:
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import subprocess
# change the round factor if you like
r = 1
screens = [l.split() for l in subprocess.check_output(
["xrandr"]).decode("utf-8").strip().splitlines() if " connected" in l]
scr_data =
for s in screens:
try:
scr_data.append((
s[0],
float(s[-3].replace("mm", "")),
float(s[-1].replace("mm", ""))
))
except ValueError:
pass
print(("t").join(["Screen", "width", "height", "diagonaln"+32*"-"]))
for s in scr_data:
scr = s[0]; w = s[1]/25.4; h = s[2]/25.4; d = ((w**2)+(h**2))**(0.5)
print(("t").join([scr]+[str(round(n, 1)) for n in [w, h, d]]))
Just a side note, but both answers give me different results:xdpyinfo
gives me "474x303 millimeters", andxrandr
"473mm x 296mm".
– agold
Feb 18 '16 at 8:51
1
@agold Now that is interesting. A rounding difference. Another interesting thing is thatxdpyinfo
outputs the desktop size (both screens), not the screen's size!
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 8:54
@agold the difference is way too big for a rounding difference!! See my edit.
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:10
yes, it is quite big, but how do these programs get this information? Is it some meta information coming from the monitor, or is it estimated based on some other parameters...?
– agold
Feb 18 '16 at 9:13
@agold It seems to be related to a bug inxdpyinfo
: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xorg-server/+bug/201491 ALthough the report is quite old, I don't see it fixed. Also see: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=204823
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:21
|
show 5 more comments
Just in case you want a more general answer, you can cut the the gordian knot, and use a non-geeky physical ruler for that. As per this wiki, the "size of a screen is usually described by the length of its diagonal":
If you have a ruler that only displays centimeters, you can use the simple conversion:
1 cm = 0.393701 in
(or 2.54 cm = 1 in)
So if your ruler measures 30 centimeters, your screen is 11.811 inches. You can also use google with a query of the form 30 cm to in
.
Image credits: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Display_size_measurements.png
Ask Ubuntu is a site for Software solutions, so your answer is a bit off-topic here... On the other hand, it's correct, well written, very readable and funny! :-) So upvoted!
– Fabby
Feb 22 '16 at 13:21
1
@dn-ʞɔɐqɹW: Actually, it's based on a mistake on my side. I read the question, "How can I get my laptop's monitor size?", and my first thought was "well, with a ruler", and before reading the complete question, I had my answer carved out the stone block.
– phresnel
Feb 22 '16 at 14:00
As a side note, one inch equals 25.4 mm exactly.
– Paddy Landau
Feb 22 '16 at 22:54
add a comment |
Xdpyinfo
is a utility for displaying information about an X server. It is used to examine the capabilities of a server, the predefined values for various parameters used in communicating between clients and the server, and the different types of screens and visuals that are available.
The command to get the monitor size is:
xdpyinfo | grep dimensions
Result
dimensions: 1366x768 pixels (361x203 millimeters)
1
Hi Parto, I really like your answer +1, however, look here: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=204823 there is a huge difference in the dimensionsxdpyinfo
reports andxrandr
.
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:19
@Jacob Something interesting - askubuntu.com/questions/378386/…
– Parto
Feb 18 '16 at 9:25
1
When measuring with a good old physical quality tape-measure, I get on my screen pretty much exactly the output ofxrandr
: 473mm, whilexdpyinfo
reports way too short (445mm
). This question turns out to be more interesting then OP assumed I guess :)
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:32
add a comment |
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How To Check Laptop Screen Size
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Another option, using xrandr
, is the command:
xrandr | grep ' connected'
Output:
DVI-I-1 connected primary 1680x1050+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 473mm x 296mm
VGA-1 connected 1280x1024+1680+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 376mm x 301mm
(mind the space before connected
, else disconnected
will be included)
Important differences between xdpyinfo
and xrandr
- While
xrandr
lists screens separately (in case of multiple monitors),xdpyinfo
outputs one single set of dimensions for all screens together ("desktop size" instead of screen size)
As noticed by @agold there is (quite) a difference between the two, which seems too big to be a simple rounding difference:
xrandr: 473mm x 296mm
xdpyinfo: 445x278
It seems related to a bug in xdpyinfo
. See also here.
If you'd insist on inches
Use the small script below; it outputs the size of your screen(s) in inches; width / height / diagonal (inches)
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import subprocess
# change the round factor if you like
r = 1
screens = [l.split()[-3:] for l in subprocess.check_output(
["xrandr"]).decode("utf-8").strip().splitlines() if " connected" in l]
for s in screens:
w = float(s[0].replace("mm", "")); h = float(s[2].replace("mm", "")); d = ((w**2)+(h**2))**(0.5)
print([round(n/25.4, r) for n in [w, h, d]])
To use it:
Copy the script into an empty file, save it as get_dimensions.py
, run it by the command:
python3 /path/to/get_dimensions.py
Output on my two screens:
width - height - diagonal (inches)
[18.6, 11.7, 22.0]
[14.8, 11.9, 19.0]
Edit
Fancy version of the same script (with a few improvements and a nicer output), looking like:
Screen width height diagonal
--------------------------------
DVI-I-1 18.6 11.7 22.0
VGA-1 14.8 11.9 19.0
The script:
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import subprocess
# change the round factor if you like
r = 1
screens = [l.split() for l in subprocess.check_output(
["xrandr"]).decode("utf-8").strip().splitlines() if " connected" in l]
scr_data =
for s in screens:
try:
scr_data.append((
s[0],
float(s[-3].replace("mm", "")),
float(s[-1].replace("mm", ""))
))
except ValueError:
pass
print(("t").join(["Screen", "width", "height", "diagonaln"+32*"-"]))
for s in scr_data:
scr = s[0]; w = s[1]/25.4; h = s[2]/25.4; d = ((w**2)+(h**2))**(0.5)
print(("t").join([scr]+[str(round(n, 1)) for n in [w, h, d]]))
Just a side note, but both answers give me different results:xdpyinfo
gives me "474x303 millimeters", andxrandr
"473mm x 296mm".
– agold
Feb 18 '16 at 8:51
1
@agold Now that is interesting. A rounding difference. Another interesting thing is thatxdpyinfo
outputs the desktop size (both screens), not the screen's size!
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 8:54
@agold the difference is way too big for a rounding difference!! See my edit.
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:10
yes, it is quite big, but how do these programs get this information? Is it some meta information coming from the monitor, or is it estimated based on some other parameters...?
– agold
Feb 18 '16 at 9:13
@agold It seems to be related to a bug inxdpyinfo
: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xorg-server/+bug/201491 ALthough the report is quite old, I don't see it fixed. Also see: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=204823
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:21
|
show 5 more comments
Another option, using xrandr
, is the command:
xrandr | grep ' connected'
Output:
DVI-I-1 connected primary 1680x1050+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 473mm x 296mm
VGA-1 connected 1280x1024+1680+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 376mm x 301mm
(mind the space before connected
, else disconnected
will be included)
Important differences between xdpyinfo
and xrandr
- While
xrandr
lists screens separately (in case of multiple monitors),xdpyinfo
outputs one single set of dimensions for all screens together ("desktop size" instead of screen size)
As noticed by @agold there is (quite) a difference between the two, which seems too big to be a simple rounding difference:
xrandr: 473mm x 296mm
xdpyinfo: 445x278
It seems related to a bug in xdpyinfo
. See also here.
If you'd insist on inches
Use the small script below; it outputs the size of your screen(s) in inches; width / height / diagonal (inches)
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import subprocess
# change the round factor if you like
r = 1
screens = [l.split()[-3:] for l in subprocess.check_output(
["xrandr"]).decode("utf-8").strip().splitlines() if " connected" in l]
for s in screens:
w = float(s[0].replace("mm", "")); h = float(s[2].replace("mm", "")); d = ((w**2)+(h**2))**(0.5)
print([round(n/25.4, r) for n in [w, h, d]])
To use it:
Copy the script into an empty file, save it as get_dimensions.py
, run it by the command:
python3 /path/to/get_dimensions.py
Output on my two screens:
width - height - diagonal (inches)
[18.6, 11.7, 22.0]
[14.8, 11.9, 19.0]
Edit
Fancy version of the same script (with a few improvements and a nicer output), looking like:
Screen width height diagonal
--------------------------------
DVI-I-1 18.6 11.7 22.0
VGA-1 14.8 11.9 19.0
The script:
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import subprocess
# change the round factor if you like
r = 1
screens = [l.split() for l in subprocess.check_output(
["xrandr"]).decode("utf-8").strip().splitlines() if " connected" in l]
scr_data =
for s in screens:
try:
scr_data.append((
s[0],
float(s[-3].replace("mm", "")),
float(s[-1].replace("mm", ""))
))
except ValueError:
pass
print(("t").join(["Screen", "width", "height", "diagonaln"+32*"-"]))
for s in scr_data:
scr = s[0]; w = s[1]/25.4; h = s[2]/25.4; d = ((w**2)+(h**2))**(0.5)
print(("t").join([scr]+[str(round(n, 1)) for n in [w, h, d]]))
Just a side note, but both answers give me different results:xdpyinfo
gives me "474x303 millimeters", andxrandr
"473mm x 296mm".
– agold
Feb 18 '16 at 8:51
1
@agold Now that is interesting. A rounding difference. Another interesting thing is thatxdpyinfo
outputs the desktop size (both screens), not the screen's size!
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 8:54
@agold the difference is way too big for a rounding difference!! See my edit.
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:10
yes, it is quite big, but how do these programs get this information? Is it some meta information coming from the monitor, or is it estimated based on some other parameters...?
– agold
Feb 18 '16 at 9:13
@agold It seems to be related to a bug inxdpyinfo
: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xorg-server/+bug/201491 ALthough the report is quite old, I don't see it fixed. Also see: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=204823
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:21
|
show 5 more comments
Another option, using xrandr
, is the command:
xrandr | grep ' connected'
Output:
DVI-I-1 connected primary 1680x1050+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 473mm x 296mm
VGA-1 connected 1280x1024+1680+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 376mm x 301mm
(mind the space before connected
, else disconnected
will be included)
Important differences between xdpyinfo
and xrandr
- While
xrandr
lists screens separately (in case of multiple monitors),xdpyinfo
outputs one single set of dimensions for all screens together ("desktop size" instead of screen size)
As noticed by @agold there is (quite) a difference between the two, which seems too big to be a simple rounding difference:
xrandr: 473mm x 296mm
xdpyinfo: 445x278
It seems related to a bug in xdpyinfo
. See also here.
If you'd insist on inches
Use the small script below; it outputs the size of your screen(s) in inches; width / height / diagonal (inches)
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import subprocess
# change the round factor if you like
r = 1
screens = [l.split()[-3:] for l in subprocess.check_output(
["xrandr"]).decode("utf-8").strip().splitlines() if " connected" in l]
for s in screens:
w = float(s[0].replace("mm", "")); h = float(s[2].replace("mm", "")); d = ((w**2)+(h**2))**(0.5)
print([round(n/25.4, r) for n in [w, h, d]])
To use it:
Copy the script into an empty file, save it as get_dimensions.py
, run it by the command:
python3 /path/to/get_dimensions.py
Output on my two screens:
width - height - diagonal (inches)
[18.6, 11.7, 22.0]
[14.8, 11.9, 19.0]
Edit
Fancy version of the same script (with a few improvements and a nicer output), looking like:
Screen width height diagonal
--------------------------------
DVI-I-1 18.6 11.7 22.0
VGA-1 14.8 11.9 19.0
The script:
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import subprocess
# change the round factor if you like
r = 1
screens = [l.split() for l in subprocess.check_output(
["xrandr"]).decode("utf-8").strip().splitlines() if " connected" in l]
scr_data =
for s in screens:
try:
scr_data.append((
s[0],
float(s[-3].replace("mm", "")),
float(s[-1].replace("mm", ""))
))
except ValueError:
pass
print(("t").join(["Screen", "width", "height", "diagonaln"+32*"-"]))
for s in scr_data:
scr = s[0]; w = s[1]/25.4; h = s[2]/25.4; d = ((w**2)+(h**2))**(0.5)
print(("t").join([scr]+[str(round(n, 1)) for n in [w, h, d]]))
Another option, using xrandr
, is the command:
xrandr | grep ' connected'
Output:
DVI-I-1 connected primary 1680x1050+0+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 473mm x 296mm
VGA-1 connected 1280x1024+1680+0 (normal left inverted right x axis y axis) 376mm x 301mm
(mind the space before connected
, else disconnected
will be included)
Important differences between xdpyinfo
and xrandr
- While
xrandr
lists screens separately (in case of multiple monitors),xdpyinfo
outputs one single set of dimensions for all screens together ("desktop size" instead of screen size)
As noticed by @agold there is (quite) a difference between the two, which seems too big to be a simple rounding difference:
xrandr: 473mm x 296mm
xdpyinfo: 445x278
It seems related to a bug in xdpyinfo
. See also here.
If you'd insist on inches
Use the small script below; it outputs the size of your screen(s) in inches; width / height / diagonal (inches)
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import subprocess
# change the round factor if you like
r = 1
screens = [l.split()[-3:] for l in subprocess.check_output(
["xrandr"]).decode("utf-8").strip().splitlines() if " connected" in l]
for s in screens:
w = float(s[0].replace("mm", "")); h = float(s[2].replace("mm", "")); d = ((w**2)+(h**2))**(0.5)
print([round(n/25.4, r) for n in [w, h, d]])
To use it:
Copy the script into an empty file, save it as get_dimensions.py
, run it by the command:
python3 /path/to/get_dimensions.py
Output on my two screens:
width - height - diagonal (inches)
[18.6, 11.7, 22.0]
[14.8, 11.9, 19.0]
Edit
Fancy version of the same script (with a few improvements and a nicer output), looking like:
Screen width height diagonal
--------------------------------
DVI-I-1 18.6 11.7 22.0
VGA-1 14.8 11.9 19.0
The script:
#!/usr/bin/env python3
import subprocess
# change the round factor if you like
r = 1
screens = [l.split() for l in subprocess.check_output(
["xrandr"]).decode("utf-8").strip().splitlines() if " connected" in l]
scr_data =
for s in screens:
try:
scr_data.append((
s[0],
float(s[-3].replace("mm", "")),
float(s[-1].replace("mm", ""))
))
except ValueError:
pass
print(("t").join(["Screen", "width", "height", "diagonaln"+32*"-"]))
for s in scr_data:
scr = s[0]; w = s[1]/25.4; h = s[2]/25.4; d = ((w**2)+(h**2))**(0.5)
print(("t").join([scr]+[str(round(n, 1)) for n in [w, h, d]]))
edited Feb 19 '16 at 17:51
answered Feb 18 '16 at 8:08
Jacob VlijmJacob Vlijm
65.9k9130228
65.9k9130228
Just a side note, but both answers give me different results:xdpyinfo
gives me "474x303 millimeters", andxrandr
"473mm x 296mm".
– agold
Feb 18 '16 at 8:51
1
@agold Now that is interesting. A rounding difference. Another interesting thing is thatxdpyinfo
outputs the desktop size (both screens), not the screen's size!
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 8:54
@agold the difference is way too big for a rounding difference!! See my edit.
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:10
yes, it is quite big, but how do these programs get this information? Is it some meta information coming from the monitor, or is it estimated based on some other parameters...?
– agold
Feb 18 '16 at 9:13
@agold It seems to be related to a bug inxdpyinfo
: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xorg-server/+bug/201491 ALthough the report is quite old, I don't see it fixed. Also see: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=204823
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:21
|
show 5 more comments
Just a side note, but both answers give me different results:xdpyinfo
gives me "474x303 millimeters", andxrandr
"473mm x 296mm".
– agold
Feb 18 '16 at 8:51
1
@agold Now that is interesting. A rounding difference. Another interesting thing is thatxdpyinfo
outputs the desktop size (both screens), not the screen's size!
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 8:54
@agold the difference is way too big for a rounding difference!! See my edit.
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:10
yes, it is quite big, but how do these programs get this information? Is it some meta information coming from the monitor, or is it estimated based on some other parameters...?
– agold
Feb 18 '16 at 9:13
@agold It seems to be related to a bug inxdpyinfo
: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xorg-server/+bug/201491 ALthough the report is quite old, I don't see it fixed. Also see: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=204823
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:21
Just a side note, but both answers give me different results:
xdpyinfo
gives me "474x303 millimeters", and xrandr
"473mm x 296mm".– agold
Feb 18 '16 at 8:51
Just a side note, but both answers give me different results:
xdpyinfo
gives me "474x303 millimeters", and xrandr
"473mm x 296mm".– agold
Feb 18 '16 at 8:51
1
1
@agold Now that is interesting. A rounding difference. Another interesting thing is that
xdpyinfo
outputs the desktop size (both screens), not the screen's size!– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 8:54
@agold Now that is interesting. A rounding difference. Another interesting thing is that
xdpyinfo
outputs the desktop size (both screens), not the screen's size!– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 8:54
@agold the difference is way too big for a rounding difference!! See my edit.
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:10
@agold the difference is way too big for a rounding difference!! See my edit.
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:10
yes, it is quite big, but how do these programs get this information? Is it some meta information coming from the monitor, or is it estimated based on some other parameters...?
– agold
Feb 18 '16 at 9:13
yes, it is quite big, but how do these programs get this information? Is it some meta information coming from the monitor, or is it estimated based on some other parameters...?
– agold
Feb 18 '16 at 9:13
@agold It seems to be related to a bug in
xdpyinfo
: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xorg-server/+bug/201491 ALthough the report is quite old, I don't see it fixed. Also see: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=204823– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:21
@agold It seems to be related to a bug in
xdpyinfo
: bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xorg-server/+bug/201491 ALthough the report is quite old, I don't see it fixed. Also see: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=204823– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:21
|
show 5 more comments
Just in case you want a more general answer, you can cut the the gordian knot, and use a non-geeky physical ruler for that. As per this wiki, the "size of a screen is usually described by the length of its diagonal":
If you have a ruler that only displays centimeters, you can use the simple conversion:
1 cm = 0.393701 in
(or 2.54 cm = 1 in)
So if your ruler measures 30 centimeters, your screen is 11.811 inches. You can also use google with a query of the form 30 cm to in
.
Image credits: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Display_size_measurements.png
Ask Ubuntu is a site for Software solutions, so your answer is a bit off-topic here... On the other hand, it's correct, well written, very readable and funny! :-) So upvoted!
– Fabby
Feb 22 '16 at 13:21
1
@dn-ʞɔɐqɹW: Actually, it's based on a mistake on my side. I read the question, "How can I get my laptop's monitor size?", and my first thought was "well, with a ruler", and before reading the complete question, I had my answer carved out the stone block.
– phresnel
Feb 22 '16 at 14:00
As a side note, one inch equals 25.4 mm exactly.
– Paddy Landau
Feb 22 '16 at 22:54
add a comment |
Just in case you want a more general answer, you can cut the the gordian knot, and use a non-geeky physical ruler for that. As per this wiki, the "size of a screen is usually described by the length of its diagonal":
If you have a ruler that only displays centimeters, you can use the simple conversion:
1 cm = 0.393701 in
(or 2.54 cm = 1 in)
So if your ruler measures 30 centimeters, your screen is 11.811 inches. You can also use google with a query of the form 30 cm to in
.
Image credits: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Display_size_measurements.png
Ask Ubuntu is a site for Software solutions, so your answer is a bit off-topic here... On the other hand, it's correct, well written, very readable and funny! :-) So upvoted!
– Fabby
Feb 22 '16 at 13:21
1
@dn-ʞɔɐqɹW: Actually, it's based on a mistake on my side. I read the question, "How can I get my laptop's monitor size?", and my first thought was "well, with a ruler", and before reading the complete question, I had my answer carved out the stone block.
– phresnel
Feb 22 '16 at 14:00
As a side note, one inch equals 25.4 mm exactly.
– Paddy Landau
Feb 22 '16 at 22:54
add a comment |
Just in case you want a more general answer, you can cut the the gordian knot, and use a non-geeky physical ruler for that. As per this wiki, the "size of a screen is usually described by the length of its diagonal":
If you have a ruler that only displays centimeters, you can use the simple conversion:
1 cm = 0.393701 in
(or 2.54 cm = 1 in)
So if your ruler measures 30 centimeters, your screen is 11.811 inches. You can also use google with a query of the form 30 cm to in
.
Image credits: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Display_size_measurements.png
Just in case you want a more general answer, you can cut the the gordian knot, and use a non-geeky physical ruler for that. As per this wiki, the "size of a screen is usually described by the length of its diagonal":
If you have a ruler that only displays centimeters, you can use the simple conversion:
1 cm = 0.393701 in
(or 2.54 cm = 1 in)
So if your ruler measures 30 centimeters, your screen is 11.811 inches. You can also use google with a query of the form 30 cm to in
.
Image credits: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Display_size_measurements.png
edited Feb 23 '16 at 8:36
answered Feb 18 '16 at 10:41
phresnelphresnel
23316
23316
Ask Ubuntu is a site for Software solutions, so your answer is a bit off-topic here... On the other hand, it's correct, well written, very readable and funny! :-) So upvoted!
– Fabby
Feb 22 '16 at 13:21
1
@dn-ʞɔɐqɹW: Actually, it's based on a mistake on my side. I read the question, "How can I get my laptop's monitor size?", and my first thought was "well, with a ruler", and before reading the complete question, I had my answer carved out the stone block.
– phresnel
Feb 22 '16 at 14:00
As a side note, one inch equals 25.4 mm exactly.
– Paddy Landau
Feb 22 '16 at 22:54
add a comment |
Ask Ubuntu is a site for Software solutions, so your answer is a bit off-topic here... On the other hand, it's correct, well written, very readable and funny! :-) So upvoted!
– Fabby
Feb 22 '16 at 13:21
1
@dn-ʞɔɐqɹW: Actually, it's based on a mistake on my side. I read the question, "How can I get my laptop's monitor size?", and my first thought was "well, with a ruler", and before reading the complete question, I had my answer carved out the stone block.
– phresnel
Feb 22 '16 at 14:00
As a side note, one inch equals 25.4 mm exactly.
– Paddy Landau
Feb 22 '16 at 22:54
Ask Ubuntu is a site for Software solutions, so your answer is a bit off-topic here... On the other hand, it's correct, well written, very readable and funny! :-) So upvoted!
– Fabby
Feb 22 '16 at 13:21
Ask Ubuntu is a site for Software solutions, so your answer is a bit off-topic here... On the other hand, it's correct, well written, very readable and funny! :-) So upvoted!
– Fabby
Feb 22 '16 at 13:21
1
1
@dn-ʞɔɐqɹW: Actually, it's based on a mistake on my side. I read the question, "How can I get my laptop's monitor size?", and my first thought was "well, with a ruler", and before reading the complete question, I had my answer carved out the stone block.
– phresnel
Feb 22 '16 at 14:00
@dn-ʞɔɐqɹW: Actually, it's based on a mistake on my side. I read the question, "How can I get my laptop's monitor size?", and my first thought was "well, with a ruler", and before reading the complete question, I had my answer carved out the stone block.
– phresnel
Feb 22 '16 at 14:00
As a side note, one inch equals 25.4 mm exactly.
– Paddy Landau
Feb 22 '16 at 22:54
As a side note, one inch equals 25.4 mm exactly.
– Paddy Landau
Feb 22 '16 at 22:54
add a comment |
Xdpyinfo
is a utility for displaying information about an X server. It is used to examine the capabilities of a server, the predefined values for various parameters used in communicating between clients and the server, and the different types of screens and visuals that are available.
The command to get the monitor size is:
xdpyinfo | grep dimensions
Result
dimensions: 1366x768 pixels (361x203 millimeters)
1
Hi Parto, I really like your answer +1, however, look here: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=204823 there is a huge difference in the dimensionsxdpyinfo
reports andxrandr
.
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:19
@Jacob Something interesting - askubuntu.com/questions/378386/…
– Parto
Feb 18 '16 at 9:25
1
When measuring with a good old physical quality tape-measure, I get on my screen pretty much exactly the output ofxrandr
: 473mm, whilexdpyinfo
reports way too short (445mm
). This question turns out to be more interesting then OP assumed I guess :)
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:32
add a comment |
Xdpyinfo
is a utility for displaying information about an X server. It is used to examine the capabilities of a server, the predefined values for various parameters used in communicating between clients and the server, and the different types of screens and visuals that are available.
The command to get the monitor size is:
xdpyinfo | grep dimensions
Result
dimensions: 1366x768 pixels (361x203 millimeters)
1
Hi Parto, I really like your answer +1, however, look here: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=204823 there is a huge difference in the dimensionsxdpyinfo
reports andxrandr
.
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:19
@Jacob Something interesting - askubuntu.com/questions/378386/…
– Parto
Feb 18 '16 at 9:25
1
When measuring with a good old physical quality tape-measure, I get on my screen pretty much exactly the output ofxrandr
: 473mm, whilexdpyinfo
reports way too short (445mm
). This question turns out to be more interesting then OP assumed I guess :)
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:32
add a comment |
Xdpyinfo
is a utility for displaying information about an X server. It is used to examine the capabilities of a server, the predefined values for various parameters used in communicating between clients and the server, and the different types of screens and visuals that are available.
The command to get the monitor size is:
xdpyinfo | grep dimensions
Result
dimensions: 1366x768 pixels (361x203 millimeters)
Xdpyinfo
is a utility for displaying information about an X server. It is used to examine the capabilities of a server, the predefined values for various parameters used in communicating between clients and the server, and the different types of screens and visuals that are available.
The command to get the monitor size is:
xdpyinfo | grep dimensions
Result
dimensions: 1366x768 pixels (361x203 millimeters)
edited Feb 18 '16 at 8:25
answered Feb 18 '16 at 7:57
PartoParto
9,5821967105
9,5821967105
1
Hi Parto, I really like your answer +1, however, look here: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=204823 there is a huge difference in the dimensionsxdpyinfo
reports andxrandr
.
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:19
@Jacob Something interesting - askubuntu.com/questions/378386/…
– Parto
Feb 18 '16 at 9:25
1
When measuring with a good old physical quality tape-measure, I get on my screen pretty much exactly the output ofxrandr
: 473mm, whilexdpyinfo
reports way too short (445mm
). This question turns out to be more interesting then OP assumed I guess :)
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:32
add a comment |
1
Hi Parto, I really like your answer +1, however, look here: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=204823 there is a huge difference in the dimensionsxdpyinfo
reports andxrandr
.
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:19
@Jacob Something interesting - askubuntu.com/questions/378386/…
– Parto
Feb 18 '16 at 9:25
1
When measuring with a good old physical quality tape-measure, I get on my screen pretty much exactly the output ofxrandr
: 473mm, whilexdpyinfo
reports way too short (445mm
). This question turns out to be more interesting then OP assumed I guess :)
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:32
1
1
Hi Parto, I really like your answer +1, however, look here: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=204823 there is a huge difference in the dimensions
xdpyinfo
reports and xrandr
.– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:19
Hi Parto, I really like your answer +1, however, look here: bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=204823 there is a huge difference in the dimensions
xdpyinfo
reports and xrandr
.– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:19
@Jacob Something interesting - askubuntu.com/questions/378386/…
– Parto
Feb 18 '16 at 9:25
@Jacob Something interesting - askubuntu.com/questions/378386/…
– Parto
Feb 18 '16 at 9:25
1
1
When measuring with a good old physical quality tape-measure, I get on my screen pretty much exactly the output of
xrandr
: 473mm, while xdpyinfo
reports way too short (445mm
). This question turns out to be more interesting then OP assumed I guess :)– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:32
When measuring with a good old physical quality tape-measure, I get on my screen pretty much exactly the output of
xrandr
: 473mm, while xdpyinfo
reports way too short (445mm
). This question turns out to be more interesting then OP assumed I guess :)– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 18 '16 at 9:32
add a comment |
Hi Friends you can get Complete Details Step by Step in easy words ...
How To Check Laptop Screen Size
New contributor
add a comment |
Hi Friends you can get Complete Details Step by Step in easy words ...
How To Check Laptop Screen Size
New contributor
add a comment |
Hi Friends you can get Complete Details Step by Step in easy words ...
How To Check Laptop Screen Size
New contributor
Hi Friends you can get Complete Details Step by Step in easy words ...
How To Check Laptop Screen Size
New contributor
New contributor
answered 10 mins ago
AdMob BoosterAdMob Booster
1
1
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
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Hi user111, please see this: meta.askubuntu.com/q/15051/72216. Could you at least provide some feedback?
– Jacob Vlijm
Feb 23 '16 at 20:51