Solves a user interface issue in the Control Panel's menus Solves a user interface issue when reseting unattached monitor to factory settings Solves a bug where default applications couldn't change their Display Set any more Solves a new compatibility issue with MacOS X 10.6.x SnowLeopard Solves an issue where displaying detail of a resolution could sometimes show garbage information On ElCapitan, can configure SIP so that SwitchResX can continue to save custom resolutions and SIP can be activated again On ElCapitan, corrects a problem where the menu item checkmark would disable itself automatically On ElCapitan, can now remove previous contextual menu items and install the correct version On ElCapitan, indicates when it cannot install a custom resolution because of SIP ? Now uses FastSpring as payment processor Allows to apply new settings immediately without rebooting, by forcing two successive rotations (is still an experimental feature)įixed a bug that prevented the program to open on MacOS X versions from 10.6 to 10.8ĭoesn't try to read resolutions from system files if these were incorrectly handcrafted.Correctly shows a monitor name when the name is too long and is spanned into multiple EDID fields.Fixes a bug that crashed the Control Panel when showing the Applications list.Also shows disabled Displays in the menus even if the option to only show the clicked menu is active - to allow to reenable a previously disabled menu.Shows if a resolution is scaled or native in the current resolutions list.Correctly saves the icons end windows positions and sizes when switching to a Display Set, if automatic icons saving is set.Corrects a bug in the English localization where the table showing the current resolutions list was expanded with a new column each time the Preferences were open.Shows in the Custom resolutions list if the resolution has been created by the user (you) or is a factory provided resolution.Corrects a crash that could occur when saving icons and SwitchResX would not know what is the actual current resolution.Corrects a problem where the native resolution would be reported as "Invalid" after an OS update.This could cause further crashes in some circumstances. Corrects a bug where SwitchResX would forget the current resolution and not check any resolution in the menu, after only changing the color depth.Corrects a crash when trying to draw the Display Set preview.Changes the UI used to draw the resolution menu within the Display Set.Parses more information from exported EDID.Can distinguish and remember multiple identical monitors (same vendor, model, date of manufacture) by their serial number.Can define complex mirroring options within a Display Set (For example: monitor #1 mirrored on monitor #3, while monitor #2 is separately mirrored on monitor #4).Corrects a crash when editing Display Sets directly from the Applications properties/li>.Deprecates the SwitchResX Extension (which is no more installable on Mojave).Changed some icons in the UI to slightly modern ones.Adapted the UI to match Dark Mode in Mojave.Corrects initial bugs and crashes with macOS 10.14 Mojave.Corrects an issue when editing a scaled custom resolution could lead to negative numbers being saved.Corrects a memory leak when a display was removed.Corrects a graphical issue in the menus on Catalina running in Parallels or other virtualisation environments.It even allows you to create new custom resolutions.Ĭorrects a crash with some LG monitors on macOS Catalina You can use its menu in the Menu Bar or click on the Finder Desktop with its Contextual Menu Plugin to gain access to all these settings from within every application. SwitchRes X incorporates features relative to the Monitor Resolution, Monitor BitDepth, and Video Mirroring into one single utility. You can access to the resolutions of all your displays in a simple, customizable menu. SwitchRes X helps you manage the resolution of all your monitors.
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