cfp1,
JPEG is good image format for paper scans or photos, but not for screenshots because its lossy compression adds a lot of pixel noise. For the future use
PNG for screenshots which uses a lossless compression and is support by all applications supporting displaying or even editing images.
It is possible with UE v16.30.0.1003 to get a sharp display of syntax highlighted text as you can see on the attached PNG image.
The computer on which I made this screenshots has only a resolution of 1200 x 800 pixels. So the font size setting in Windows display setting was 100%. I have changed also the Windows desktop theme to Windows Classic as I do always on all my computers since Windows 95. And I have additionally disabled the color fading of active and inactive title bar by setting second color to same color as first color as it can be seen on looking on title bar of UltraEdit application window. I have disabled also ClearType as I don't like ClearType at all. If you use ClearType, you should run the ClearType tuner of Windows. I have also set once in the past at
Control Panel - System - Advanced system settings on tab
Advanced in group
Performance after clicking on button
Settings the option
Adjust for best performance which disables all the features producing a stylish, but in my eyes unsharp display. And last but not least the color settings for document window area and syntax highlighting have been also configured to what is best for my eyes.
Consolas is designed for ClearType. So it is perhaps not good to use this font if ClearType is disabled in Windows configuration. There are lot of TrueType monospaced fonts and some are even fixed-pitch fonts (all characters have same width in all styles, regular, bold, italic and bold+italic). I used the font Courier New more than 7 years ago as I archived UE v16.30 which I restored from the archive to make this screenshot. I think this was the default font although not liked by many people. I had never a problem with this font.
It can be seen on the screenshot that there is a color fading on menu bar (toolbar was hidden to make the screenshot smaller), file tabs bar, and status bar. This color fading could not be disabled in UE v16.30. Later UltraEdit adapted its look better on Windows desktop settings. For example in UE v22.20 on same computer the entire UltraEdit window looks crystal clear with no color fading at all. Unfortunately with UE v23.00 the library used for GUI was changed once more for ribbon interface which brought back the ClearType look Microsoft favors also for their applications even on using Windows Classic theme as it can be see on the screenshot posted by me on post
Icons are blurred in Classic mode with 64-bit UltraEdit version 24 on Windows 10.
Frankly, I am tired of explaining one UltraEdit user of hundred thousands of UE users every 3 months that purchasing a computer with an UHD display with physical dimensions < 24" for non graphic work was a very bad idea as those displays require a higher DPI value which means permanent increasing of fonts, icons and graphic elements by software rendering which most application, especially the old ones are not designed for. A computer with an UHD display with physical dimensions < 24" is good for viewing high definition photos, watching HD or UHD videos, playing HD or even UHD video games and limited for graphical work. But those displays are not designed for text editing work. Unfortunately many persons think good is what marketing of hardware selling companies persuade being good (more = better) and not what the physical conditions defined by resolution of human eyes and speed of image data processing of human brains really require. As I bought last time a notebook for myself, the most important properties were a keyboard making it possible to quickly write text and navigate in text, physical dimensions of display (not too wide to be able to use it in train from/to work), not too high resolution to be able to read text good without changing recommended DPI settings, battery working time of at least 4 hours. The keyboard layout excluded 90% of all notebooks on the market, the display 9% of the remaining 10%. Most notebooks are not designed anymore for people who really work with it.