<string>LaserJet 4 is usually a good choice.</string>
</property>
<property name="whatsThis" stdset="0">
<string><p>Chooses the type of bitmap fonts used for the display. As a general rule, the higher the dpi value, the better quality of the output. On the other hand, large dpi fonts use more resources and make KDVI slower.</p>
<p>If you are low on hard disk space, or have a slow machine, you may want to choose the same setting that is also used by dvips. That way you avoid generating several bitmap versions of the same font.</p></string>
<string>Allows KDVI to use MetaFont to produce bitmap fonts. Unless you have a very specific reason, you probably want to switch this on.</string>
</property>
</widget>
</vbox>
<widget class="QLabel" row="0" column="0">
<property name="name">
<cstring>textLabel1</cstring>
</property>
<property name="text">
<string>Metafont mode:</string>
</property>
</widget>
<widget class="KComboBox" row="0" column="1">
<property name="name">
<cstring>metafontMode</cstring>
</property>
<property name="toolTip" stdset="0">
<string>LaserJet 4 is usually a good choice.</string>
</property>
<property name="whatsThis" stdset="0">
<string><p>Chooses the type of bitmap fonts used for the display. As a general rule, the higher the dpi value, the better quality of the output. On the other hand, large dpi fonts use more resources and make KDVI slower.</p>
<p>If you are low on hard disk space, or have a slow machine, you may want to choose the same setting that is also used by dvips. That way you avoid generating several bitmap versions of the same font.</p></string>
<string>If you are using inverse search, KDVI uses this command line to start the editor. The field '%f' is replaced with the filename, and '%l' is replaced with the line number.</string>