Set isScaled to value of radio button "Scaled" of radio group 1 of group 1Ĭlick radio button "Scaled" of radio group 1 of group 1Ĭlick button 1 of UI element 3 of group 1Ĭlick radio button "Default for display" of radio group 1 of group 1įix for wch1zpink's answer on macOS 10.15.4: tell application "System Preferences" Repeat until (exists radio button "Scaled" of radio group 1 of group 1 of window "Displays") Tell application process "System Preferences" I located that new service I created and assigned it a keyboard shortcutĪfter this, just follow the same procedures to create a new workflow and service for the display resolution lowerįix for wch1zpink's answer on macOS 12.0.1, thanks to the UI Browser app: tell application "System Preferences" I saved this file as rez_higher.workflowįrom here, I opened up system preferences/keyboard/shortcuts/services. Once I made sure both scripts work correctly, I then opened up Automator and created a new service for the display resolution higher and added the appropriate script as shown in the following image. This next script is for making the display resolution lower: if my display resolution is not set at the default setting tell application "System Preferences"Ĭlick radio button 3 of radio group 1 of group 1 of tab group 1 Tell application "System Events" to tell process "System Preferences" to tell window "Built-in Retina Display"Ĭlick radio button "Scaled" of radio group 1 of tab group 1Ĭlick radio button 4 of radio group 1 of group 1 of tab group 1 Reveal anchor "displaysDisplayTab" of pane "" This one is for making the display resolution higher: if my display resolution is already at the default position On my system I just enabled both scripts as dictation commands but if you create a new Service through Automator, you can assign keyboard shortcuts to those services.įirst, here are the two scripts I started with. One script for adjusting the display resolution higher and one adjusting display resolution lower. On my system I created two different scripts. Never had any latency or lag issues with Catalina, or Mojave for instance.Yes you totally can achieve this without running additional apps. Is there a chance to roll back to Catalina? Big Sur is definitely so very disappointing that I wish I hadn't updated until it was stable enough. HDD: APPEL SSD SM0512G (free space in HDD 353 GB) - APFS file system ![]() Opening files via Browser such as Safari takes much longer than usual, also data download start seems slower even for small files such as a PDF of 238Kb.Įven text scrolling via cursor keys is slower. Noticed on switch between existing users, that the computer displays the load icon on the mouse for a few second after showing the new login screen for the user, and after it disappears it takes up to 5 seconds before you are allowed to write the password on the field, almost a "mini lockup" or lagging. ![]() The load screen background and the screen itself go black and then reappear. ![]() Noticed some screen "blanking" on loading from boot: After Big Sur update the machine is extremely slow on performing basic tasks, such as log into profile, change profiles, and anything which uses graphic card, such as simple gaming in windowed mode and low res, which with Catalina did not happen at all.
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