700 Software
700 Software

Reputation: 87773

Eclipse: large toolbar icons

Does anybody know how to use large toolbar icons? Edit: How do I do it?

Upvotes: 22

Views: 37717

Answers (10)

Oliver Richter
Oliver Richter

Reputation: 43

I can't comment, because <50 reputation points. I refer to the method of resizing the images to let's say 32x32. I wrote a little python script, in case someone might be interested. It changes the size of all .gif and .png to 32x32. Use on your own risk :)

#!/usr/bin/python3
# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-

import os
from PIL import Image
for path,dirs,files in os.walk(r"D:\win7\apps\renesas_e2_studio\eclipse"):
    for f in files:
        uri = os.path.join(path,f)
        for t in ".gif .png".split(" "):
            if uri[-4:] == t:
                img = Image.open(uri)
                img = img.resize((32,32))
                img.save(uri)
                print(uri)
                
print("FINISHED")

Upvotes: 1

BluEOS
BluEOS

Reputation: 606

In 2022 on linux with an UltraHD display:

  • set your system as zoom 100% (forget 200% or fractional hacks, it's slow and buggy)
  • only use font scaling : gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface text-scaling-factor 1.5

To launch Eclipse (with perfect text and icon size) from terminal, use :

GDK_SCALE=2 GDK_DPI_SCALE=0.5 ./eclipse

Upvotes: 3

axhuelsmann
axhuelsmann

Reputation: 171

Here is what to do for an easy solution:

  1. Go to the start icon of your eclipse or PLCXpressoand
  2. Click your right mouse bottom
  3. Go to down and click properties
  4. Click compartibility
  5. Check overwrite high DPI scaling
  6. Select system (enhanced)
  7. Click OK at the bottom

Start Eclipse and enjoy

Upvotes: 17

ittradco
ittradco

Reputation: 193

In case you use STS 4, edit SpringToolSuite4.ini instead with the properties suggested by @Frank

-Dswt.enable.autoScale=true
-Dswt.autoScale=150
-Dswt.autoScale.method=nearest

Upvotes: -1

Frank
Frank

Reputation: 2043

At first, close eclipse and be sure it is closed. Than edit eclipse.ini and add the following lines:

-Dswt.enable.autoScale=true
-Dswt.autoScale=150
-Dswt.autoScale.method=nearest

The -Dswt.autoScale=150 will increase your Icons, 150 will say 150%. If it is not enough, increase it or decrease it otherwise.

Upvotes: 24

Glen Whitney
Glen Whitney

Reputation: 581

Running Eclipse 2020-09 R (i.e, v4.17) on Linux (openSUSE Tumbleweed with XFCE session) on an HP Spectre x360 with 283 dpi, I found that out of the box the fonts were fine but the icons were unreadably tiny. Also, setting -Dswt.autoscale=300 in the eclipse.ini made the icons look perfect but completely disrupted the layout and functionality of SWT (couldn't click on tabs, many texts were unreadably clipped). So I had to resort to the method of scaling all of the icon files. Here's one way to automate it.

After running eclipse for the first time (since that first run unpacks a lot of icons), go to the top-level eclipse directory (the one in which the eclipse executable resides), and enter xonsh (the python-based shell) in that directory. Then you can execute the following commands (at your own risk), for example by copy-pasting them at the prompt:

pngl = $(find . -name "*.png").strip().split("\n")
for png in pngl: 
     if not ('@2x' in png): 
         print(f"Found icon {png}, moving...") 
         pngo = png.replace('.png','-orig.png') 
         mv @(png) @(pngo) 
         pngbig = png.replace('.png','@2x.png') 
         if pngbig in pngl: 
             print("  ...has enlarged, scaling that by 150") 
             convert @(pngbig) -resize 150% @(png) 
         else: 
             print("  ...no enlargement, scaling orig by 300") 
             convert @(pngo) -resize 300% @(png)

Of course if you wanted a different basic scaling factor, say 250%, you would change the 150% scaling of the double size icon in the pngbig branch to 125% and the 300% scaling of the original-size icons in the other branch to 250%.

Upvotes: 0

add -Dswt.autoScale=150 in eclipse.ini, is working for my hybrid win10 12.3"

Thanks to Markus B

Upvotes: 1

Markus Bauer
Markus Bauer

Reputation: 11

I solved it on Linux by appending this line to eclipse.ini:

-Dswt.autoScale=200

See the original answer on reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/archlinux/comments/61zsds/eclipse_neon_on_hidpi_screen_and_plasmaa_5/

Upvotes: 1

Barry
Barry

Reputation: 31

CLICK HERE TO VIEW SCREENSHOT

I have searched and searched for weeks for a solution to this problem If you want to solve it go to your eclipse folder and *.png search. Resize all the icons from 16x16 to 32x32 Then do the same for *.gif.

As you can see in the image I have not finished the task but it does work if you want to put in the time. I am sure there is an easier batch method of doing it I am sorry I have not found that yet. Just in case anyone is still using eclipse (which I prefer) and wanted larger toolbar icons there you go.

EDIT: I found an easy to use batch tool called Fotosizer. It remembers all the icons file locations when you drag and drop your *.png *.gif found files into the image selection area. Just set up the options for sizing and set the output like the image I just uploaded. If 32x32 is too big for you just make them a little smaller. Fotosizer Click Here I used the free version. Screenshot Click Here

Be sure when you do your search to right click and sort the images by dimensions to make it easy for you to find all the 16x16 files in a group. This is in windows 7 64 bit version and RapidClipse Version: 2.3.1.201607130701

Take care, Barry

Upvotes: 2

VonC
VonC

Reputation: 1323203

There is no support in Eclipse for large/small icons in the toolbar.
As this bug describes:

The other issue though is really that the GNOME toolbar style, similar to Mac OS X, is for a small number of large icons, while the Eclipse toolbar style is for a large number of quick-access buttons.
This means that the recommendations for, say, icons vs icons+text don't really apply to the Eclipse toolbar.


Update 2016 (5 years later)

Since 2011, you have some workarounds, like this answer referring to davidglevy/eclipse-icon-enlarger, which double the size of the icon in the eclipse main jar.
You have more instructions at PhantomYdn/eclipse-icon-enlarger.

You have the same idea (double the size of icons) implemented as a script (here is an gene1wood/scale_eclipse.sh)

But if the issue is poor (too small) resolution on HiDPI / Retina displays, try also the actual official Microsoft workaround (as illustrated here)

  1. regedit:
    HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE > SOFTWARE > Microsoft > Windows > CurrentVersion > SideBySide: create a DWORD PreferExternalManifest set to 1.

  2. Beside eclipse.exe, create an eclipse.manifest file with, as content, one similar to this article.

Upvotes: 6

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