MacOS way is better, text is blurry, but much less. I still don't like it though, but can use it in an emergency.
But there apparently is another way that Xorg and Windows uses. I have perfectly crisp (as far as my eyes can tell) UI and text on both systems at 150% scale (27" 4K display).
> for tech debt reasons
I thought Wayland was supposed to fix the tech debt - so now it introduced some that makes bare basic features impossible?
Fractional scaling works perfectly well on Xorg Linux and Windows, but looks blurry on Wayland Linux. Maybe it's not micrometer-scale crisp, but I can't see that. Text on Wayland is very visibly blurred.
And it's not just text, but UI controls too. It looks like Wayland just renders the lower integer scale factor and then stretches the resulting bitmap image. That's bullshit.
PDF invoices are nothing wrong. As long as you're not a VAT payer there are just basic requirements (vendor/customer ID and address, invoice number). Most likely yours is compliant - but you need to provide it.
In all EU countries an invoice (tax receipt) is a legal document very exactly specified by local law as well as EU regulation, and you can't move a cent without it - you won't be able to claim the expense (subtract from tax base = pay income tax on profit only) if you don't have it.
But there apparently is another way that Xorg and Windows uses. I have perfectly crisp (as far as my eyes can tell) UI and text on both systems at 150% scale (27" 4K display).
> for tech debt reasons
I thought Wayland was supposed to fix the tech debt - so now it introduced some that makes bare basic features impossible?