Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

smirking

macrumors 68040
Original poster
Aug 31, 2003
3,942
4,009
Silicon Valley
I'm considering upgrading my 16" M1 Pro to an M4 version. I'm contemplating going down to a 14" model to slim down the size and weight of my travel pack. In comparing different models it jumped out at me that the 14" MacBook Pro actually has more pixels than a 15" MacBook Air.

Huh? Is the screen on the 14" MacBook Pro actually larger than the screen on the 15" Air? How is it that the 14" MBP has a resolution of 3024 by 1964 pixels, but the 15" Air's resolution is 2880 by 1864 pixels?
 

NeonNights

macrumors 6502a
Jul 22, 2022
673
884
Be careful comparing resolutions as the scaling options play a big part in how much you can fit onscreen. Despite my M3 Max MBP 14 having a higher overall native resolution of 3024x1964, the available scaling options imply the MBA 15 will actually show more content.

I wish I had just a little more room to work with in Photoshop without having to go to the heavy 16" MBP. The MBP 14 is technically the better display, but you will fit less onscreen at virtually all MacOS scaling options compared to the MBA 15. No one is really going to use a MacBook at native spec resolution, text and icons would be uncomfortably tiny and difficult to read. Instead, MacOS offers different scaling options.

MBA 15:
- 1024 x 663
- 1280 x 828
- 1440 x 932
- 1710 x 1107 (default)
- 1920 x 1243 (more space)

MBP 14:
1024x665
1147x745
1352x878
1512x982 (default)
1800x1169 (more space)
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Zaroff and chrismu

OSMac

macrumors 65816
Jun 14, 2010
1,455
6
I ran my 15” Air at 1440x932 a step down from the default for a clean 2x integer scale. Fonts were easy to read.

The 14” Pro defaults to a 2x scale 1512x982 resulting in smaller default fonts. Of course you can tinker with font sizes in many apps or scale to a lower system resolution on the Pro but then you lose the advantages of crisp integer scaling.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.