Ask Ubuntu Asked on December 17, 2021
Is there a way to set the screen borders manually? Right now, when I have it connected to my TV via HDMI, the edges of the screen are cut off. It looks something like this that I found from another question:
Card: AMD Radeon HD 4890
TV: Panasonic th-50px60u
For LG TV's (webOS 4, Software Version 05.30.10)
All Settings > Picture > Aspect Ratio Settings > Just Scan > On
Although you might experience performance issues when running on a 4K resolution screen with the maximized app window, the app runs smoothly if you scale the app window down a little bit.
Answered by Unigazer on December 17, 2021
Switch Your TV-settings to the 4:3
format. Now You see two black blocks left and right beside the desktop margins. If a third of ubuntu's control panel is cut off now, You can be sure of that the problem is not Your TV.
Answered by Kaplan on December 17, 2021
Samsung TV:
Tools -> Image Size (change from 16:9 to adjust screen).
If you have another TV or monitor you just search for your model in google/youtube with overscan or zoom image mode
Answered by MrTok on December 17, 2021
Guys there is simple solution to it using panasonic TV. In the Advanced Settings, turn the overscan off. This fixes the problem
Answered by shailendra miglani on December 17, 2021
I had the same problem with my Samsung TV connecting to my laptop via HDMI and found the solution by going to the TV Menu > Picture > Screen Adjustment > chose "screen fit" that fixed it. There you will find other options too but for me the screen fit did the trick and that over scan issue was fixed.
All this time i was thinking it was the display setting on the Ubuntu laptop i needed to fix. Hope This helps other.
Answered by akashbaots on December 17, 2021
I was having the same problem. The xrandr
info in other answers didn't help in my case, but it was good background anyway. I fixed the problem on my screen by resetting the aspect ratio setting back to 1:1. It had somehow been changed to "wide".
Answered by user424910 on December 17, 2021
My TV also does that. Usually I just run
xrandr --output LVDS1 --primary --auto --output HDMI1 --auto --same-as LVDS1
This fixes the wrong resolution on the monitor, making it a mirror of my laptop.
I have this command conveniently aliased to something I can remember:
alias xrandr-hdmi-mirror="xrandr --output LVDS1 --primary --auto --output HDMI1 --auto --same-as LVDS1"
This way I just run xrandr-hdmi-mirror
whenever I connect my TV.
Of course, you should adjust HDMI1 and/or LVDS1 to your system. Run xrandr
to discover which device you should use.
Since you have only one monitor (your TV) try the following:
Discover the output name of your TV. It is probably HDMI1
or VGA1
. To do it, run xrandr
then search for the word "connected". For example, if you see HDM1 connected
, then your TV is HDMI1
.
Try doing a xrandr --output HDMI1 --auto
. See if the resolution gets okay.
If not, you'll have to do a xrandr --output HDMI1 --mode 1024x768
, for example. However, you should replace 1024x768
to a resolution that your TV supports. The output of xrandr
will tell you the available ones.
Answered by thiagowfx on December 17, 2021
What you are looking at is a"feature called "overscan" (or "zoom" on some TVs). It's the TV itself cutting off the edges!
So, look for a feature called overscan (or zoom) in the setup of the TV, and disable it!
Some history:
Long time ago, when cathode ray tubes - CRTs - were used as television displays, and the images were transferred in an analogue way, it had a technical reason, it was useful.
The TV stations were used to always have a border with nothing important in it.
With pixel matrix displays like LCD, overscan no longer makes sense.
But people are used to have it, and think it's better to have the feature than not have it.
If you want to sell LCD TVs, you have customers asking for it, and because it costs nothing to provide it, you better list that feature in the description.
It will not do any harm, no problem. Except if someone enables it.
Answered by Volker Siegel on December 17, 2021
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