<table><tr><td style="">jjorge added a comment.
</td><a style="text-decoration: none; padding: 4px 8px; margin: 0 8px 8px; float: right; color: #464C5C; font-weight: bold; border-radius: 3px; background-color: #F7F7F9; background-image: linear-gradient(to bottom,#fff,#f1f0f1); display: inline-block; border: 1px solid rgba(71,87,120,.2);" href="https://phabricator.kde.org/D25018">View Revision</a></tr></table><br /><div><div><blockquote style="border-left: 3px solid #a7b5bf; color: #464c5c; font-style: italic; margin: 4px 0 12px 0; padding: 4px 12px; background-color: #f8f9fc;"><p>How can you interpret these weird charge_now values correctly? If the range is [1/1000, 901] Wh, while the real range is [0, 45] Wh, how does the charge curve look like while charging or discharging? Are there (continues) values in [46, 901] Wh? Do you assume all of those as 100%?</p></blockquote>
<p>The only correct interpretation is that a battery chan't have 2000% charge, neither -45%. So we assume the 0-100 range for a percentage ;-)</p>
<p>Edit: Is the charge_now or the maximum value incorrect due a faulty battery?</p>
<p>Yes, that's the reason. The BIOS tells me I should junk it, but I can still work nearly two hours more when it is plugged in ;-)</p></div></div><br /><div><strong>REPOSITORY</strong><div><div>R106 KSysguard</div></div></div><br /><div><strong>BRANCH</strong><div><div>acpi-move-battery-to-sysfs</div></div></div><br /><div><strong>REVISION DETAIL</strong><div><a href="https://phabricator.kde.org/D25018">https://phabricator.kde.org/D25018</a></div></div><br /><div><strong>To: </strong>jjorge, davidedmundson, Plasma, ahiemstra<br /><strong>Cc: </strong>alexde, plasma-devel, LeGast00n, The-Feren-OS-Dev, jraleigh, fbampaloukas, GB_2, ragreen, ZrenBot, ngraham, alexeymin, himcesjf, lesliezhai, ali-mohamed, jensreuterberg, abetts, sebas, apol, ahiemstra, mart<br /></div>