![]() The only way to properly start spotify for me at the moment without a lingering terminal window is to use ALT F2 and type in "spotify -force-device-scale-factor=1.5" manually. So I am at a loss on how to create a proper starter file, in order to start with a scale in which I can actually read anything. I cannot edit the original file because it's mounted read only and even if I could the change would not last. ![]() but the starter for "My Spotfiy" does not show up. TryExec=spotify -force-device-scale-factor=1.5Įxec=spotify -force-device-scale-factor=1.5 %U Navigate to the folder where you fetched the repository (unzip if needed) and make sure the file called spotify is executable: cd shpotify chmod x spotify Copy the file spotify to a convenient location in your PATH, or set your PATH to include the folder where the file is located. ~/.local/share/applications/sktopĬhmod x ~/.local/share/applications/sktopĪnd then edited the file, changing the lines: ![]() I am unable to replace Spotify's "sktop" file, the starter file which is used to integrate spotify into the Gnome Desktop.Ĭp /snap/spotify/current/usr/share/spotify/sktop \ I desperately need to pass a command line parameter to spotify, in order to force UI scaling on my 4k display all fonts are so small that I cannot read anything otherwise. As the current Spotify build is not DPI aware, the amount to scale the interface by can be specified using the terminal command: spotify -force-device-scale-factorX. Spotify can be installed on any Linux distribution via a snap package. Using the Snap package Using the Spotify archive On a Debian 10 operating system, we ran the commands and processes described in this article. Spotfiy was installed using Ubuntu's built-in store, it has no own package sources, it comes from Canonical's repository. The command line is used in both installation techniques. Lenovo Legion T530 w/ LG 27UD58P-B display
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