![]() ![]() If you have feedback for TechNet Support, contact Windows seems to do that by random: sometimes main display reacts to touch (input on Cintiq, but response on other display), and sometimes it's right and Cintiq responses correctly. Please remember to mark the replies as answers if they help, and unmark the answers if they provide no help. The only way I've seen this done effectively is to use the touchscreen as default primary screen however your device might could not. ![]() ![]() Mouse is locked to the primary active monitor logical location.Ĭontrol Panel/TabletPC/calibration - a dialog pops up, press the settings button, and there you can select which screen the touch works for. If you run multiple monitors with touch screen or run one with and one without neither screen can calibrate properly for both screen areas and the touch The only reason it lines up with your finger is that it's calibrated to do so. The reason you're not seeing anyone talking about the touchscreen function is that the touch screen is simply a mouseīuilt into the monitor. I found that for real touch screen this issue also occurs when set up a touchscreen as the non-primary monitor in a dual monitor situation. Your suspect makes sense, this device is not a real touch screen indeed. It seems to me that they said this device was designed as this way and Windows should change for that. Tested on PC and laptop (home and work) - in both cases problem exists.īeg You pardon for my rusty english - I don't use it very often. It looks like Windows doesn't store any information about defining Cintiqĭisplay as the one with touch abilities. Problem is that I need to do it many times when I am connecting Cintiq to PC (it is annoying). When I go to 'Tablet Computer Settings' and then for Cintiq selected (in display options):Ĭonfiguration->Settings(UAC)->What type of display do you want to indentify->Pen input (translation of path might be not accurate - I use polish Windows)Īnd I'll choose Cintiq as active display, all is fine (by touching it when prompted). Unfortunately Windows seems to do that by random: sometimes main display reacts to touch (input on Cintiq, but response on other display), and sometimes it's right and Cintiq responses correctly. When I connect it to PC, touch functions are activated by Windows. I have a Wacom Cintiq Companion Hybrid, which can behave as (an almost standard) touchscreen. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |