Multiple monitor DPI Issues (Desktop not Metro)
If you extend your desktop on to the external monitor instead of duplicating it each monitor will run at its native resolution.
Windows key+P will bring up the configuration options.
-
Marked as answer by
Yolanda ZhuMicrosoft contingent staff, Moderator
Monday, January 27, 2014 1:10 AM
-
Unmarked as answer by
David WoltersModerator
Thursday, June 19, 2014 3:18 PM
January 10th, 2014 5:47pm
If you extend your desktop on to the external monitor instead of duplicating it each monitor will run at its native resolution.
Windows key+P will bring up the configuration options.
-
Marked as answer by
Yolanda ZhuMicrosoft contingent staff, Moderator
Monday, January 27, 2014 1:10 AM
-
Unmarked as answer by
David WoltersModerator
Thursday, June 19, 2014 3:18 PM
January 10th, 2014 5:47pm
If you extend your desktop on to the external monitor instead of duplicating it each monitor will run at its native resolution.
Windows key+P will bring up the configuration options.
-
Marked as answer by
Yolanda ZhuMicrosoft contingent staff, Moderator
Monday, January 27, 2014 1:10 AM
-
Unmarked as answer by
David WoltersModerator
Thursday, June 19, 2014 3:18 PM
January 10th, 2014 5:47pm
Hi,
I have a Lenovo Yoga 2 pro with Win 8.1, which has an ultra high resolution (3,200X1,800) and I am using it with a Targus docking station. In order to see things, I have the custom DPI scaling set at 250%. Here is the problem, when i use the docking
station with an external monitor that has a maximum of 1900X1200, Metro looks nice, but anything on the desktop (office and other desktop only programs), everything is HUGE and unusable. If I try to set DPI scaling for multiple monitors, I can no longer
use my custom 250% DPI for the Lenovo, instead, I am given a slider that makes the external monitor look nice, but when the laptop is removed, it is so small that I'd need a magnifying glass to see. If I want to use a docking station, I have to change
the DPI scaling every time I switch between being docked and as a standalone, which requires me to go through all of the steps to switch and then log out and log back in. Is there a way to have custom DPIs for each monitor? I think this will only
become a bigger problem as more companies develop higher resolution devices.
Thanks,
Dean
January 10th, 2014 7:46pm
If you extend your desktop on to the external monitor instead of duplicating it each monitor will run at its native resolution.
Windows key+P will bring up the configuration options.
-
Marked as answer by
Yolanda ZhuMicrosoft contingent staff, Moderator
Monday, January 27, 2014 1:10 AM
-
Unmarked as answer by
David WoltersModerator
Thursday, June 19, 2014 3:18 PM
January 10th, 2014 8:47pm
If you extend your desktop on to the external monitor instead of duplicating it each monitor will run at its native resolution.
Windows key+P will bring up the configuration options.
I have a similar setup as OP's except two external monitors(both 1920x1080) connected to a dock.
I tried this, but i can still only have 1 scaling size for all monitors. I have to set my two external monitors to 100% scaling in order for elements(taskbar, title bars, etc) to look proper, but then those same elements on my laptop monitor (3200x1800)
are TINY!
Why can't i have 100% scaling on my external monitors and 200% scaling on my laptop monitor?
I use this monitor for work and it is constantly being connected/disconnected from the dock throughout the day and i continuously have to sign in and out in order to change the scaling options.
This is extremely cumbersome and non-intuitive. I thought windows 8.1 was supposed to solve issues like this.
February 6th, 2014 10:34pm
Windows 8 can deal with an external monitor connected directly to the system.
If you interpose a dock you will need software and/or drivers to manage the dock interface. This is a problem for the dock manufacturer to resolve, particularly if you have 3 monitors not connected by Displayport.
February 7th, 2014 1:27am
Windows 8 can deal with an external monitor connected directly to the system.
If you interpose a dock you will need software and/or drivers to manage the dock interface. This is a problem for the dock manufacturer to resolve, particularly if you have 3 monitors not connected by Displayport.
The issue isn't connecting an external monitor. Windows 8.1 can handle that. What it seems is, is that it can't handle FULL control of multiple scaling settings PER monitor. This is most definitely a Windows 8.1 issue. The same issue occurs when i plug an
external monitor(1920x1080) directly into the micro-HDMI plug on my laptop bypassing the dock.
So, how can i have 100% scaling on my external monitor(s) and 200% scaling on my laptop monitor?
-
Edited by
RjPiston
Saturday, February 08, 2014 1:39 AM
February 7th, 2014 2:23pm
Windows 8 can deal with an external monitor connected directly to the system.
If you interpose a dock you will need software and/or drivers to manage the dock interface. This is a problem for the dock manufacturer to resolve, particularly if you have 3 monitors not connected by Displayport.
The issue isn't connecting an external monitor. Windows 8.1 can handle that. What it seems is, is that it can't handle FULL control of multiple scaling settings PER monitor. This is most definitely a Windows 8.1 issue. The same issue occurs when i plug an
external monitor(1920x1080) directly into the micro-HDMI plug on my laptop bypassing the dock.
So, how can i have 100% scaling on my external monitor(s) and 200% scaling on my laptop monitor?
-
Edited by
RjPiston
Saturday, February 08, 2014 1:39 AM
February 7th, 2014 2:23pm
Windows 8 can deal with an external monitor connected directly to the system.
If you interpose a dock you will need software and/or drivers to manage the dock interface. This is a problem for the dock manufacturer to resolve, particularly if you have 3 monitors not connected by Displayport.
The issue isn't connecting an external monitor. Windows 8.1 can handle that. What it seems is, is that it can't handle FULL control of multiple scaling settings PER monitor. This is most definitely a Windows 8.1 issue. The same issue occurs when i plug an
external monitor(1920x1080) directly into the micro-HDMI plug on my laptop bypassing the dock.
So, how can i have 100% scaling on my external monitor(s) and 200% scaling on my laptop monitor?
-
Edited by
RjPiston
Saturday, February 08, 2014 1:39 AM
February 7th, 2014 2:23pm
Windows 8 can deal with an external monitor connected directly to the system.
If you interpose a dock you will need software and/or drivers to manage the dock interface. This is a problem for the dock manufacturer to resolve, particularly if you have 3 monitors not connected by Displayport.
The issue isn't connecting an external monitor. Windows 8.1 can handle that. What it seems is, is that it can't handle FULL control of multiple scaling settings PER monitor. This is most definitely a Windows 8.1 issue. The same issue occurs when i plug an
external monitor(1920x1080) directly into the micro-HDMI plug on my laptop bypassing the dock.
So, how can i have 100% scaling on my external monitor(s) and 200% scaling on my laptop monitor?
-
Edited by
RjPiston
Saturday, February 08, 2014 1:39 AM
February 7th, 2014 5:23pm
bump!
February 10th, 2014 10:30pm
bump!!!
February 24th, 2014 10:52pm
I'm curious what the potential solutions are.
I have a Dell XPS 9530. If I only run one screen whether it is the HiDPI internal screen or a 1080p external scaling is appropriate.
However, when connecting multiple displays, only the main display (doesn't matter which one) gets proper scaling.
The secondary display runs at native resolution but the UI scaling doesn't seem to work properly (should be 100% for a 24" 1080p screen). Instead some items like desktop icons and the IE interface are scaled up while other UI elements appear fuzzy
as if the scaling is off by 5-25%.
The easy fix would be if I could manually set the scaling to 100% for my 1080p screen and 200% for my internal hidpi. But there doesn't appear to be a way to do this. The options are either apply the same scaling to all displays or let Windows
use it's failed reasoning to do it itself.
Hopefully either MS fixes it or a third party utility allows display scaling and resolution to be set manually.
March 14th, 2014 3:21pm
I have the same problem. Unfortunately Windows 8.1 doesnt allow you to directly select different dpi profiles for different monitors (uncheck "Let me choose one scaling level for all my displays" will not work as expected and will just try to adapt
the windows size leaving menu bar and icons sadly bad looking)
I hope someone knows hot to modify the register in order to get different scaling percentage for different monitors.
March 26th, 2014 6:31pm
Same problem here.
So I left DPI scaling default 125% and changed the resolution of the high dpi laptop display from 1920x1080 to 1366x768. Looks a way worse then it would be on 1920x1080 and with 200% scaling. On 1920x1080 and scaling set to 200% everything is OK on laptop
display, but on external 22' display looks oversized. If scaling set back to 125% then external 22' display looks all right, but laptop is two small.
It would be awesome to leave native resolutions and set scaling of external monitor to 125% and scaling of laptop 200%. Unfortunately it is not posible
March 31st, 2014 4:25pm
The additional problem with per-display scaling is that it appears to be done using bitmap resizing. So even if you could set your primary display (presumably built-in display) to 250% and the external display to 100%, the external display would be rendered
as if it were 250% and then the bitmap is resized down 2.5 times. This introduces massive blur which makes it unusable for significant text work such as development. Likewise if you wanted the built-in display to be 200% and the external 125%, the external
display will be rendered at 200% and then resized down 1.6 times making it blurry.
I've
started a thread on this after buying a monitor only to find out how rubbish Windows 8.1 is at it's per-display scaling.
Per-display scaling should be controllable by the user so that they can define the exact scaling for each display. And it shouldn't used bitmap resizing, it should render it properly at the specified scaling otherwise it will never be clear and sharp.
April 12th, 2014 8:59pm
Bump!
I've got the same issue with my Samsung Ativ Book 9+. I plug the laptop into an external Monitor at my desk and disconnect it for meetings. The resolution switching when going from the HiDPI Laptop to the external monitor is never quite right
no matter what settings I try. I DON'T WANT to "Extend" my display. I just want to work with one display at a time (either my Laptop monitor or my Desktop monitor).
I'm running the latest Windows 8.1 Update 1, and I still can't believe this issue isn't resolved yet. It is extremely obnoxious and a loss of time/productivity to have to keep changing your display resolutions and then sign out/in to make it look right.
Every Microsoft employee should have a HiDPI laptop so they understand the pain your customers are going through right now.
Isaac
April 15th, 2014 6:49pm
Completely agree. I have asked (not seen unfortunately) about the same usage patterns on Mac. People say they have no issues. In Win 8.1 my morning looks like this: I hook my HDPI Lenovo Yoga S1 (Full HD) to external monitor via mini HDMI (24" ,
Full HD) and log in. Everything is big on the monitor. So I change the DPI to normal and log off and on again. Now things are OK on external monitor. At the end of the day I log off and go home. At home I log on and change the DPI to 150% and log ff off and
on again to get proper scaling on the tiny laptop screen. So I am doing full log on/off to my laptop at least 2 times a day (loosing all work of course) to get things done. I like the HDMI screen but it is really an overkill to work like this. MICROSOFT WAKE
UP - IT IS KILLING PRODUCTIVITY !!!
June 3rd, 2014 7:46pm
My day looks the same! :-(
I was scrolling down in this thread, hoping someone would know a solution, but it doesn't look like there is. Now I am much less happy with my super HiRes screen! (Dell XPS 15).
June 5th, 2014 11:14pm
Has anyone tried using two seperate displays or one really large screen that can efficiently show multiple windows?
June 7th, 2014 8:33pm
Why is this marked as answered when this is clearly not the answer to the original question.
June 11th, 2014 6:37am
I have the same laptop! Found any work around?
June 19th, 2014 12:36am
This is NOT a viable answer for this issue.
The people posting about this issue are very well aware of the traditional and modern (Win+P) methods to configure external displays.
The issue is that the scaling "enhancements" in 8.1 don't truly solve the problem for those of us who still use the desktop instead of the Metro/Modern apps, since out here in the real world, hardly anything we need to get work done exists in a function
Metro/Modern UI (cmd prompt, admin tools, Lync, Office)
Beyond that, people don't spend money on 24", High resolution displays so they can have gigantic versions of a Phone/Tablet UI, we spend money on that stuff so we can actually leverage the extra information space available.
June 19th, 2014 9:36am
I would love to see a fix for this, I have a nice shiny new Dell 3800 with a 3200 X 1800 screen. When I'm in the office I use a couple of normal res screens and Windows doesn't seem to be able to handle swapping between the scaling for the high res display
and the monitors. The only way I have found to sort it out is to restart the laptop with the screens connected (or disconnected) to reset the scaling. Fiddling with the resolution doesn't even sort it out.
August 8th, 2014 10:55am
I'd love to see this issue fixed. I suggest MS guys working on Windows 8.X/Threshold to try a MacBook Pro Retina and connect it to a non-retina monitor and observe how OSX gracefully handles DPI scaling between the monitors.
-
Edited by
dsalunga
Friday, August 08, 2014 6:14 PM
August 8th, 2014 6:12pm
I'd love to see this issue fixed. I suggest MS guys working on Windows 8.X/Threshold to try a MacBook Pro Retina and connect it to a non-retina monitor and observe how OSX gracefully handles DPI scaling between the monitors.
-
Edited by
dsalunga
Friday, August 08, 2014 6:14 PM
August 8th, 2014 6:12pm
I'd love to see this issue fixed. I suggest MS guys working on Windows 8.X/Threshold to try a MacBook Pro Retina and connect it to a non-retina monitor and observe how OSX gracefully handles DPI scaling between the monitors.
-
Edited by
dsalunga
Friday, August 08, 2014 6:14 PM
August 8th, 2014 6:12pm
I'd love to see this issue fixed. I suggest MS guys working on Windows 8.X/Threshold to try a MacBook Pro Retina and connect it to a non-retina monitor and observe how OSX gracefully handles DPI scaling between the monitors.
-
Edited by
dsalunga
Friday, August 08, 2014 6:14 PM
August 8th, 2014 9:12pm
Bump. Same issue on Dell XPS 15 (9530) purchased in Summer 2014
August 12th, 2014 9:46pm
I am trying to do this with a Surface Pro 3. It seems to work if I logon after I connect the external monitor. But then if I undock the surface and just use the built-in screen everything is super tiny. If I logoff and log back on again, then it adjusts
the size properly for the built-in high resolution screen... So a bit of a work around, but I would like it to adjust without having to close all my programs and logoff/logon again.
August 21st, 2014 2:07am
This tread is already aging and no solution seems to have been found. Microsoft - any thoughts ? I am still logging on and off every day to switch between the monitors and I dont see this problem going away before windows is programmed to properly re-render
applications with new DPI settings once requested by user. I agree it would seems strange as programs literally have to restart but the blurry bitmap solution or alternative log off/log on is for dummies not for the people who pay for tool to work with (why
the hell we pay for super fast standby resume if we need to spend 30 seconds or more for the log on/off cycle every time, not mentioning the pain of closing all relevant work)
August 22nd, 2014 11:56am
Bump. Same as others - I'm on Dell XPS 15 (9530) at 3200 x 1800.
Using an external extended display leads to blurry text and menu items on that display.
Microsoft - we need a solution. Multimonitor setups are unusable at present state.
September 18th, 2014 1:12pm
I've been living with this dock/undock resolution nightmare for about 2 months now. Only option I have found is to logout/login as has been pointed out a couple of times.
I have played with most of the font scaling settings and nothing seems to fix it.
Even if there was something to poke Explorer with to say "check the DPI!!!".
Bizarre that they can't refresh the DPI when dock/undock (which is actually a resolution change as well) occurs.
Dell XPS11 = 11.6" 2560 x 1440
External monitor 24" 1920 x 1080
Do I say "bump" as well?
September 18th, 2014 2:16pm
Same issue. BUMP. Microsoft, some kind of answer here please?
September 25th, 2014 2:49am
I cant believe this issue has not been resolved since Feb... I just bought a Lenovo Yoga 2 Pro and cannot believe this problem.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
September 26th, 2014 2:31am
Same issue with my Lenovo Yoga 2 pro
October 2nd, 2014 4:50am
i have same issue on my yoga pro 2
-
Edited by
pie_z
Friday, October 10, 2014 9:46 AM
October 10th, 2014 9:45am
i have same issue on my yoga pro 2
-
Edited by
pie_z
Friday, October 10, 2014 9:46 AM
October 10th, 2014 9:45am
i have same issue on my yoga pro 2
-
Edited by
pie_z
Friday, October 10, 2014 9:46 AM
October 10th, 2014 9:45am
i have same issue on my yoga pro 2
-
Edited by
pie_z
Friday, October 10, 2014 9:46 AM
October 10th, 2014 12:45pm
Yep, same issue with my Surface Pro 3 + Dock... If I have my 2 1920*1200 monitors plugged in in a 3 screen setup then the taskbar icons and text look fuzzy and low quality on the 2 externals. If I disconnect the Surface Pro 3 screen they become clear
again... Grrr
October 20th, 2014 2:05pm
Bump!
Obviously I am not the only one who thinks multiscreen setup is rather unusable in the current state.
I run an Acer XB270HK 3840x2160 and a BenQ RL2450H 1920x1080. The fonts on the latter either look blurry or bold - when I first saw this I thougth I was drunk.
This has to be solved!
Anyone test this in Win10 yet? Was it at least solved
October 20th, 2014 9:29pm
I have the same issue. Laptop 13.3 1920x1080 and 23" monitor 1920x1080. All the time I need to reload laptop to have normal screen after using external monitor with hdmi.
October 21st, 2014 8:25pm
3840x2160 and 1920x1080
Anybody got this to work? Windows even doesn't recognize PPI and even with unchecked "let
me choose one scaling level" the scaling level is same for every display
November 3rd, 2014 9:06pm
having the same issues. It's quite frustrating as I have a Hackintosh build and it seems to manage HiRes Displays just fine and let me configure scaling on each monitor.
Sigh... Windows 8.1. All those layoffs have just made things worse.
As a few people have said above, it's getting near to a year of having this issue. It's completely unacceptable.
November 4th, 2014 8:04am
Another puzzled user - Dell XPS15 with QHD+ resolution and external monitor (HP, full HD ) that I cant get to look "normal" .
jooooooohoooo, microsooooooffft.. come out of hiding...
November 5th, 2014 11:29am
seems like there are no solutions given for this issue affecting A LOT of people.
I also got my shiny new dell precision for a ton of and now i have to use it in 1920*1080 instead of the 3200*1800 in order to avoid the tiny taskbar, or the applications running in random mode on external screen , or other strange things. IE is working
with huuuuge characters on the external monitor and in the same time vmware is displaying the virtual machines as they were on a 3200*1800(so everything is very tiny), and other programs scale properly
please offer us a solution
-
Edited by
magorb
Friday, November 07, 2014 11:16 AM
November 7th, 2014 11:15am
seems like there are no solutions given for this issue affecting A LOT of people.
I also got my shiny new dell precision for a ton of and now i have to use it in 1920*1080 instead of the 3200*1800 in order to avoid the tiny taskbar, or the applications running in random mode on external screen , or other strange things. IE is working
with huuuuge characters on the external monitor and in the same time vmware is displaying the virtual machines as they were on a 3200*1800(so everything is very tiny), and other programs scale properly
please offer us a solution
-
Edited by
magorb
Friday, November 07, 2014 11:16 AM
November 7th, 2014 11:15am
seems like there are no solutions given for this issue affecting A LOT of people.
I also got my shiny new dell precision for a ton of and now i have to use it in 1920*1080 instead of the 3200*1800 in order to avoid the tiny taskbar, or the applications running in random mode on external screen , or other strange things. IE is working
with huuuuge characters on the external monitor and in the same time vmware is displaying the virtual machines as they were on a 3200*1800(so everything is very tiny), and other programs scale properly
please offer us a solution
-
Edited by
magorb
Friday, November 07, 2014 11:16 AM
November 7th, 2014 11:15am
seems like there are no solutions given for this issue affecting A LOT of people.
I also got my shiny new dell precision for a ton of and now i have to use it in 1920*1080 instead of the 3200*1800 in order to avoid the tiny taskbar, or the applications running in random mode on external screen , or other strange things. IE is working
with huuuuge characters on the external monitor and in the same time vmware is displaying the virtual machines as they were on a 3200*1800(so everything is very tiny), and other programs scale properly
please offer us a solution
-
Edited by
magorb
Friday, November 07, 2014 11:16 AM
November 7th, 2014 2:15pm
Help!!! I'm on a Yoga 2 Pro and connected to a projector using the hdmi port, but when I did, many programs became so tiny I can't see them! Some of you are saying you log off and log back on... I'm not sure what to do to get it back to normal.
I can shut down, which I've done, but nothing changes at all. I need to be able to see stuff!!! Help me out if you can!
November 12th, 2014 2:17am
Wanted to chime in and say that I am having the same problem. Microsoft this is a disgrace! Windows 8.1 is unusable for anyone who wants to dock in and out of a dual monitor setup. This is unacceptable when Microsoft's flagship hardware,
the Surface Pro 3, has this problem.
Can we get a response from a Microsoft moderator?
November 13th, 2014 2:08am
Same issue here on a Asus UX301, no way of having small characters on external monitors and reasonably sized fonts on the gorgeously high-DPI native display. We do need to
MANUALLY SET DPI values per each monitor, and no way of doing that at the moment.
And, as a bonus, the text "Let me choose one scaling level per each display" is totally misleading. It should be fixed in something like "Let Windows automatically choose about the SAME scaling level per each display" (or more honestly,
"Let Windows mess up with DPI settings")
November 15th, 2014 2:07pm
Surface Pro 3, has this problem.
I just changed my Surface Pro 2 using the
Change only the text size option. It wasn't obvious that I had to use
Apply for each change but finally got each of the 6 categories bigger than the slider had left them. Perhaps what we need is a way to increase the range of the slider? Anyway, now I have a more readable display on the Surface
with only slightly too big text on my other monitor. One strange thing is that the text for Desktop shortcuts changed to white enclosed by dark (some kind of Accessibility feature being invoked because of my choices?)
November 15th, 2014 5:05pm
Same issue here. I have looked on a lot of forums, and there are a lot of people who just don't understand the issue - offering completely irrelevant advice!
As with a number of others on this thread, I have a Surface Pro 3... fantastic machine, and beautiful display. But connect my external 1080x1920 24" display, and everything is too large on the external... so as with everyone else, I have to set the
Change the size of all items option in display settings, set it to the smallest value, then log out, and log back in. That fixes the external display, but...
Having to make this setting change every time I connect or disconnect to an external monitor is annoying enough... but having to log out, and then log back in to see the change is ridiculous!
But what REALLY annoys me is that I like to use extended display mode - I love to work with two monitors - my lapyop and external display side by side. With the scaling set to lowest, so that the external display looks correct, the Surface Pro 3 screen is
just unusable - its too small, and gives me a headache trying to use it. It makes me feel like an old man complaining that "owwww its too small for my old eyes!".
I realise that this is a Windows issue - but heck, if the Surface Pro 3 is really the tablet to replace my laptop, this flaw in Windows makes the SP3 a NON laptop replacement. Using dual monitor setups with my portable is essential to how I work.
I almost can't believe that in 2014 Windows still does not have proper per monitor PPI settings. Technology has landed a probe on a bloody comet for crying out loud - why can't Windows have proper UI scaling per monitor??!!
What really scares me is that I dont think this is a simple fix for MS, and it may be some time before we see this resolved... but here's hoping Microsoft are already working on s solution.
I'd like to see a Microsoft representative give us an official update on this issue... Hello? Are you out there?
November 19th, 2014 5:31am
If you extend your desktop on to the external monitor instead of duplicating it each monitor will run at its native resolution.
Windows key+P will bring up the configuration options
Thank you. It may not answer the OPs question, but this is the answer I was looking for.
November 21st, 2014 4:56am
This is not correct. Extending the display will NOT solve this ridiculous issue. WTF Microsoft!? It appears this issue has been around for nearly a year and remains unsolved!?!?! I just paid $1200 for a top of the line
i7 Lenovo Yoga 2 and I cannot extend the display correctly!!! This is the kind of absolutely abject failure to provide the basics that continues to confound Microsoft users. Do better.
December 25th, 2014 2:35am
Got the same issue. Running Bootcamp macbook pro, win 8.1.
need to do the workaround with login/logout several times aday because i need to move from workstation to meetings etc with my computer.
A fix for this would be awesome in the next SP :)
January 14th, 2015 5:34pm
Same issue with my Dell XPS 15
January 16th, 2015 5:02pm
Wow, this has been a long thread! The workaround which I have found for this is modifying the screen resolution. The one I found is 1366x768. It works pretty well for my work ThinkPad Yoga since Windows remembers different resolution settings
for different monitors. This way you can have your Duplicate resolution set for external monitors and when you disconnect, it goes back to the already set 1366x768. This is not something I would have done in the past but the quality of image on
my laptop seems the same. I still have a beef with MS that different windows show up with different levels of clarity, but that is the problem on any resolution. Try it guys, it's the most pain free way in my opinion.
By the way, I was actually trying to see if it's possible configure and manage resolution profiles in Windows. I heard it was back in XP. One of my clients says that since he deals with many different monitors at different times of the day, he
has to constantly change resolutions. Any ideas?
January 28th, 2015 8:02pm
Same problem here - new Surface Pro 3 and I can't find a way to make the SP3 and the external 1920 x 1080 display work sensibly. This is ridiculous!
February 4th, 2015 9:08pm
can't find a way to make the SP3 and the external 1920 x 1080 display work sensibly.
Have you tried the selected text size changes?
February 5th, 2015 12:16am
It seems the problem is rather deeply rooted in API level and needs rather bold rethinking of how apps work. Perfect solution probably requires app/program to be rendered twise in the memory in parallel and then seamlessly show one or another render depending
on which monitor the app is on at any given moment. This needs more memory and probably rebuilding all native and third party apps for being aware of the DPI changes during window movement and ensure that thing wont go out of sync on logical level (i.e. mouse
coordinates on form canvas etc.). Also these UIs need to multiply invisibly as needed (more than two memory images) if external monitor with different DPI is attached during the run of the program (no restart). Maybe the solution needs to be completely vector
oriented ? All-in-all pretty messy stuff but should be the sole focus of deep level changes in windows 10. Also it would be wise to alert people if that kind of rethinking is going to take place or not - or i have to start saving for Mac.
By the way Mac is cheating - the seamless DPI change comes from bitmap level resize - all apps are rendered on bigger virtual screen and scaled down by integer times (sharp picture). They can get away with it only because they do have only integer differences
between normal and retina displays. So microsoft has to invent something completely new and much more complicated in realization as they do not control the screen sizes. (I just heard the Mac theory from somewhere - no source of proof)
-
Edited by
Sven Lange EE
Thursday, February 12, 2015 7:34 PM
February 12th, 2015 7:29pm
It seems the problem is rather deeply rooted in API level and needs rather bold rethinking of how apps work. Perfect solution probably requires app/program to be rendered twise in the memory in parallel and then seamlessly show one or another render depending
on which monitor the app is on at any given moment. This needs more memory and probably rebuilding all native and third party apps for being aware of the DPI changes during window movement and ensure that thing wont go out of sync on logical level (i.e. mouse
coordinates on form canvas etc.). Also these UIs need to multiply invisibly as needed (more than two memory images) if external monitor with different DPI is attached during the run of the program (no restart). Maybe the solution needs to be completely vector
oriented ? All-in-all pretty messy stuff but should be the sole focus of deep level changes in windows 10. Also it would be wise to alert people if that kind of rethinking is going to take place or not - or i have to start saving for Mac.
By the way Mac is cheating - the seamless DPI change comes from bitmap level resize - all apps are rendered on bigger virtual screen and scaled down by integer times (sharp picture). They can get away with it only because they do have only integer differences
between normal and retina displays. So microsoft has to invent something completely new and much more complicated in realization as they do not control the screen sizes. (I just heard the Mac theory from somewhere - no source of proof)
-
Edited by
Sven Lange EE
Thursday, February 12, 2015 7:34 PM
February 12th, 2015 7:29pm
It seems the problem is rather deeply rooted in API level and needs rather bold rethinking of how apps work. Perfect solution probably requires app/program to be rendered twise in the memory in parallel and then seamlessly show one or another render depending
on which monitor the app is on at any given moment. This needs more memory and probably rebuilding all native and third party apps for being aware of the DPI changes during window movement and ensure that thing wont go out of sync on logical level (i.e. mouse
coordinates on form canvas etc.). Also these UIs need to multiply invisibly as needed (more than two memory images) if external monitor with different DPI is attached during the run of the program (no restart). Maybe the solution needs to be completely vector
oriented ? All-in-all pretty messy stuff but should be the sole focus of deep level changes in windows 10. Also it would be wise to alert people if that kind of rethinking is going to take place or not - or i have to start saving for Mac.
By the way Mac is cheating - the seamless DPI change comes from bitmap level resize - all apps are rendered on bigger virtual screen and scaled down by integer times (sharp picture). They can get away with it only because they do have only integer differences
between normal and retina displays. So microsoft has to invent something completely new and much more complicated in realization as they do not control the screen sizes. (I just heard the Mac theory from somewhere - no source of proof)
-
Edited by
Sven Lange EE
Thursday, February 12, 2015 7:34 PM
February 12th, 2015 7:29pm
It seems the problem is rather deeply rooted in API level and needs rather bold rethinking of how apps work. Perfect solution probably requires app/program to be rendered twise in the memory in parallel and then seamlessly show one or another render depending
on which monitor the app is on at any given moment. This needs more memory and probably rebuilding all native and third party apps for being aware of the DPI changes during window movement and ensure that thing wont go out of sync on logical level (i.e. mouse
coordinates on form canvas etc.). Also these UIs need to multiply invisibly as needed (more than two memory images) if external monitor with different DPI is attached during the run of the program (no restart). Maybe the solution needs to be completely vector
oriented ? All-in-all pretty messy stuff but should be the sole focus of deep level changes in windows 10. Also it would be wise to alert people if that kind of rethinking is going to take place or not - or i have to start saving for Mac.
By the way Mac is cheating - the seamless DPI change comes from bitmap level resize - all apps are rendered on bigger virtual screen and scaled down by integer times (sharp picture). They can get away with it only because they do have only integer differences
between normal and retina displays. So microsoft has to invent something completely new and much more complicated in realization as they do not control the screen sizes. (I just heard the Mac theory from somewhere - no source of proof)
-
Edited by
Sven Lange EE
Thursday, February 12, 2015 7:34 PM
February 12th, 2015 10:29pm
I have a Dell XPS 13 and can't extend to a Dell projector in the 'extend' mode. When lowering the resolution and use the 'duplicate' mode it works, but then everything is far to large for the screen.
The only method working correct is using PowerPoint 2013. Here the screen is automatically extended to the projector and it works like a charm!
February 23rd, 2015 5:19am
I can't believe I just spent all this money on a Dell XPS 13 and U2715H and I can't use the two displays correctly and have to screw around with the display settings as others have mentioned. Seems crazy that this doesn't work. It seems as
though the scaling per display just isn't working right. In fact not sure how it is even supposed to work? If I uncheck the "Let me choose one scaling level for all my displays," I assume I am using different display scaling levels per
display, but how would I even know which display I'm modifying as the UI is not display specific at this point.
March 8th, 2015 12:53pm
I can't believe I just spent all this money on a Dell XPS 13 and U2715H and I can't use the two displays correctly and have to screw around with the display settings as others have mentioned. Seems crazy that this doesn't work. It seems as
though the scaling per display just isn't working right. In fact not sure how it is even supposed to work? If I uncheck the "Let me choose one scaling level for all my displays," I assume I am using different display scaling levels per
display, but how would I even know which display I'm modifying as the UI is not display specific at this point.
-
Proposed as answer by
bootis
17 minutes ago
March 8th, 2015 4:52pm
I can't believe I just spent all this money on a Dell XPS 13 and U2715H and I can't use the two displays correctly and have to screw around with the display settings as others have mentioned. Seems crazy that this doesn't work. It seems as
though the scaling per display just isn't working right. In fact not sure how it is even supposed to work? If I uncheck the "Let me choose one scaling level for all my displays," I assume I am using different display scaling levels per
display, but how would I even know which display I'm modifying as the UI is not display specific at this point.
-
Proposed as answer by
bootis
Friday, September 11, 2015 7:02 AM
March 8th, 2015 4:52pm
If I uncheck the "Let me choose one scaling level for all my displays," I assume I am using different display scaling levels per display, but how would I even know which display I'm modifying as the UI is not display specific at
this point.
Good point. The UI is not very clear about its implementation but we could probably use ProcMon to help clarify that. E.g. filter with Operation Is RegSetValue and see what you get? BTW insight gained that way might even help
you come up with better workarounds. <eg>
Good luck
March 8th, 2015 5:04pm
I have the same issue. Dell P2715Q : 3840x2160
and Asus 1920x1080
April 24th, 2015 5:44am
Hi,
I tried to set up "remote desktop connection manager 2.7" which I downloaded from microsoft website to my dell xps 15 9530 laptop. I could not set it up as I spent all day. I am having an error which says "the credentials that were used
to connect (IP adress) did not work". It seems it will be really painfull. Should I buy a new screen with high resolution. It is my last choice but it seems there is no other option for me.
Thanks
Zeki
May 9th, 2015 8:27am
Just got a Lenovo X1 Carbon and I've got the same problem. I don't want to have to log out and log back in every time I move my laptop. If I log in with the external displays connected, things look great on the external displays. But if I log in without
them connected, I get a misshapen screen. Log out and back in, problem is solved.
However, if I log in with the external displays connected, then unplug them, the laptop display never scales back up.
Ugh.
May 11th, 2015 6:27pm
But if I log in without them connected, I get a misshapen screen. Log out and back in, problem is solved.
FWIW this reminds me of a problem I occasionally have with a MUF app if it opens on my widescreen monitor and I want to move it to my Tablet. E.g. if I press Win+Shift+CursorRight the MUF app moves to my tablet but sometimes apparently retains
some of the scaling that it had on the other monitor. In this case what I do is press Win+CursorRight (e.g. make it start to go Split Screen) and (important) remember to release the Win- key so it actually does go split screen and gets scaled and
rendered accordingly. Then press Win+CursorUp to make it go Fullscreen (and release the Win- key) which then makes it rescale to the Tablet fullscreen size.
May 12th, 2015 12:20am
FWIW this reminds me of a problem I occasionally have with a MUF app if it opens on my widescreen monitor and I want to move it to my Tablet. E.g. if I press Win+Shift+CursorRight the MUF app moves to my tablet but sometimes apparently retains
some of the scaling that it had on the other monitor. In this case what I do is press Win+CursorRight (e.g. make it start to go Split Screen) and (important) remember to release the Win- key so it actually does go split screen and gets scaled and
rendered accordingly. Then press Win+CursorUp to make it go Fullscreen (and release the Win- key) which then makes it rescale to the Tablet fullscreen size.
It's not the programs that are too large/small, it's, well, pretty much everything else. The taskbar, popup menus, etc. It's all no good.
May 12th, 2015 11:22am
I have a laptop and external monitor both at 1920 x 1080 and it even then has this problem, everything being the wrong size when switching between the monitor and the laptop's display and the text being blurry. I have to sign out and in again to
fix. For some reason, I didn't have this issue when my laptop had a cheap 1366x768 screen but now that it has the same resolution, this issue has reared its head. I am absolutely going crazy and I've had the laptop for only a week and I'm seriously
considering returning/selling and getting a Mac and I've been a Windows user since Windows 95.
May 13th, 2015 1:51am
Same issue on my XPS 13 connected to a viewsonic monitor. XPS runs at 3200 x 1800 and the monitor at 1920 x 1080.
Any Windows 10 users notice if this got resolved? Very frustrating.
June 25th, 2015 12:20pm
I have the similar problem. Toshiba Satellite with 4k screen, and Dell 2410 (1920x1200) external monitor in the desktop with it extended onto the external monitor. Text on the external monitor is too large (especially Task Manager - its like the characters
are 3/8 of a inch high - only 7 tasks are visible).
1) If I drag a window from the laptop so its 1/2 on the external display, the part of the external display is huge and wider than the display. The laptop part of the window stays the same width and is readable. I want the external display part of the window
to be the same width as the laptop.
2) If I drag a window from the external monitor so its partially on the laptop screen, the text is too small to read and the window is 1/2 the width on of the part of the window on the external monitor. The part of the window on the external monitor
has the same window width and text size. Again, I want the part of the window on the lower monitor to be the same with as it is on the upper external monitor and the same text size, so I can read from the upper display onto the lower display.
To put it another way, I want the font "m" width to be the same per cm (of display) on both displays since the ppi (dpi) is different for the different monitors. It works in Windows 7.
My understand (of Windows 7) is that each window is created off screen and non-overlapping, and then bit-blitted to the display. And this is what it looks like windows 8.1 is doing. I'm guessing that it needs to create the parts for each display
separately because the DPIs of the displays are widely different.
July 25th, 2015 7:37pm
Same story here as most of the above. Yoga 2 pro, 8.1 setup with two external monitors. Every time I go into an appointment (numerous times a day) I have to close all my programs, disconnect from dock, open laptop, change the display settings,
sign out and sign back in. Crazy Microsoft won't answer or address this. Anybody know if windows 10 addresses this?
September 3rd, 2015 11:10pm
From what I can tell, Windows 10 makes things a little better. The issue is STILL NOT FIXED, but things are a little better. I still have to make sure I'm connected to my big monitors before I sign in, otherwise, everything looks a little off. And
when I undock, everything is a little blurry until I sign out and sign back in. Microsoft, are we ever going to get any sort of indication that you even acknowledge this as an issue?
Sigh.... One day this will be fixed. Maybe with Windows 15 or 16?
September 8th, 2015 12:46pm
when I undock, everything is a little blurry until I sign out and sign back in.
Before undocking what happens if you drag your windows half off and half on? <eg>
That is the most noticeable thing about W10 in this regard that I have seen. Half off and half on somehow sometimes seems clearer than all on either monitor. YMMV. One of my monitors is XVGA so I suppose I should be grateful that
it is still supported at all.
September 8th, 2015 1:03pm