![]() And the rendering of text uses that default setting on the Worker Process Account rather than the setting on my account Problem was just that the IIS Worker Process uses a separate account that still had the default 120 DPI setting. So I immediately set it down to 96DPI and thought no more of it. It's a 14" laptop with 1920x1080 resolution (and a ridiculously fast harddrive compared to my old machine), so the clever people at Dell thought that as you obviously don't buy high resolution to get more real estate, had set the default DPI at 120 instead of 96. Well, to the story belong that I got a new devmachine last week. So identical code rendered as images turned out having different size of the text on two machines that I thought had the same settings. I made a webpage that contained a chart, so far no problem.īut when I moved the code over to the server the chart titles turned out smaller than on my devmachine. Just spent some hours today tracking down what I felt was a really odd and unexpected error that turned out to be really simple. ![]()
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