On a dual-monitor setup, how can just one of the two be rotated?
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
I just got a second widescreen monitor at work, and I'm planning on setting them up so that I can have Eclipse open on one and Firefox in the other. I
want the Eclipse display to be "normal" screen so I have space for the package explorer and whatnot, but the Firefox display to be rotated 90 degrees for better viewing of list-based web pages (e.g. Stack Overflow, Super User). What's a good way to do this?
Monitor: HP L2245wg (both)
Graphics card: Nvidia Quadro NVS 285
multiple-monitors display rotate
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
I just got a second widescreen monitor at work, and I'm planning on setting them up so that I can have Eclipse open on one and Firefox in the other. I
want the Eclipse display to be "normal" screen so I have space for the package explorer and whatnot, but the Firefox display to be rotated 90 degrees for better viewing of list-based web pages (e.g. Stack Overflow, Super User). What's a good way to do this?
Monitor: HP L2245wg (both)
Graphics card: Nvidia Quadro NVS 285
multiple-monitors display rotate
2
You should be able to do this in the Nvidia or ATI Control Panel.
– Ben S
Oct 9 '09 at 15:55
add a comment |
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
up vote
6
down vote
favorite
I just got a second widescreen monitor at work, and I'm planning on setting them up so that I can have Eclipse open on one and Firefox in the other. I
want the Eclipse display to be "normal" screen so I have space for the package explorer and whatnot, but the Firefox display to be rotated 90 degrees for better viewing of list-based web pages (e.g. Stack Overflow, Super User). What's a good way to do this?
Monitor: HP L2245wg (both)
Graphics card: Nvidia Quadro NVS 285
multiple-monitors display rotate
I just got a second widescreen monitor at work, and I'm planning on setting them up so that I can have Eclipse open on one and Firefox in the other. I
want the Eclipse display to be "normal" screen so I have space for the package explorer and whatnot, but the Firefox display to be rotated 90 degrees for better viewing of list-based web pages (e.g. Stack Overflow, Super User). What's a good way to do this?
Monitor: HP L2245wg (both)
Graphics card: Nvidia Quadro NVS 285
multiple-monitors display rotate
multiple-monitors display rotate
edited Feb 16 '12 at 18:29
studiohack♦
11.3k1880113
11.3k1880113
asked Oct 9 '09 at 15:50
Pops
4,650246390
4,650246390
2
You should be able to do this in the Nvidia or ATI Control Panel.
– Ben S
Oct 9 '09 at 15:55
add a comment |
2
You should be able to do this in the Nvidia or ATI Control Panel.
– Ben S
Oct 9 '09 at 15:55
2
2
You should be able to do this in the Nvidia or ATI Control Panel.
– Ben S
Oct 9 '09 at 15:55
You should be able to do this in the Nvidia or ATI Control Panel.
– Ben S
Oct 9 '09 at 15:55
add a comment |
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
up vote
4
down vote
The free product iRotate handles multiple monitors:
iRotate provides convenient access to
the native rotation capabilities
present in contemporary display
drivers, via a popup menu accessible
from the system tray and optional
system-wide hotkeys. It's no longer
necessary to resort to bloated Windows
hacks, additional software layers or
phantom drivers to achieve content
rotation. In most instances, support
is now available directly from the
graphics chip manufacturers, who
continuously improve and apply quality
assurance to their drivers.
By leveraging the native rotation
capabilities now provided by ATI,
nVidia, Intel, Matrox, S3, XGI and
others, iRotate offers exceptional
speed and efficiency, with minimal
impact on scarce system resources -
the entire iRotate package, including
installation, documentation, and
native language support in all the
major European and Asian languages,
weighs in at only 125kb. And like all
EnTech graphics utilities, iRotate
supports multiple graphics cards from
various vendors, simultaneously, under
every multi-monitor enabled operating
system from Windows 98 to Vista.
Seems like a decent utility, but I'm not a big fan of installing extra widgets, and in my case it's not an option anyways.
– Pops
Oct 10 '09 at 1:22
1
I love that you have graphics cards from all the major vendors installed at once.
– Joel B
May 13 '13 at 17:02
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
On Windows 10, with Intel graphics:
Method 1:
Right click on the desktop and select 'Display Settings' (or get here from any of the other many ways possible).
Click on 'Advanced display settings' at the bottom.
Click on 'Display adapter properties' at the bottom of the screen.
Click on the 'Intel (r) HD Graphics Control Panel' tab.
Select the display for which you need to change the rotation.
On the 'Rotation' setting, click on the desired rotation option and click ok.
Method 2: (which I just found right after I used Method 1)
Right click on the desktop and select the 'Graphics Options' menu.
Select the 'Rotation' sub menu.
Select the display for which you need rotation to be set in the next sub menu.
Select the rotation option from the final sub menu.
Method 3:
CTRL+ALT+[Arrow Key] works in this scenario as well. Note that this rotates the monitor on which the mouse pointer is on.
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
accepted
This is the solution I ended up using. It's probably specific to my graphics card, but it's probably at least similar to other cards' methods.
-Go to the regular display settings window (open a context menu from the desktop and select Properties)
-Go to the settings tab and click on the monitor to rotate
-Click Advanced
-Select the graphics card's tab -- in my case, the Quadro tab -- and choose the rotation menu item -- in my case, "NVRotate" from the popout menu
-Select the radio button for the desired orientation and click Apply
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
- /open/ Control Panel
- /click/ Appearance and Personalization
- /click/ adjust Screen Resolutions
- /change setting/ display: (name first monitor) --> (name second screen)
- /change setting/ orientation: (Landscape) --> (Portrait)
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
This stuff's in your drivers, assuming you run windows, so simply install them. You may have to go through the card's control thingy (As in, Catalyst for ATI, or the nVidia control panel) instead of the windows dialogue, I did.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
@thiliana R’s answer is great. Thanks a lot.
His answer was for Windows 10
. I built on his answer and show the difference for Windows 7 here.
Method 1
Right click on your desktop, and click on
Screen Resolution
:Choose
Advanced Settings
Click on `Intel HD Graphics Control Pane
Under Display: select ‘Digital Display`
Under Rotation: select ‘Rotate to 90 degrees`
Method 2:
1. Right click on your desktop, and select Graphics Options
Select
Rotation
from the popup windowSelect
Digital Display
Select
Rotate to 90 degrees
I couldn’t get the Cntrl
+Alt
+Arrow
to work on my Windows 7 machine.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Follow thilina's advice until you get to the monitor page. Click "Graphics Properties", the button with the Intel blue chip on the left side. Go to the rotation area. Make sure you are on your 2nd monitor on the dropdown menu. Rotate it. Boom. Done.
Are you sure Boom is the desired result?
– Pierre.Vriens
Nov 20 at 15:55
add a comment |
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
7 Answers
7
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
4
down vote
The free product iRotate handles multiple monitors:
iRotate provides convenient access to
the native rotation capabilities
present in contemporary display
drivers, via a popup menu accessible
from the system tray and optional
system-wide hotkeys. It's no longer
necessary to resort to bloated Windows
hacks, additional software layers or
phantom drivers to achieve content
rotation. In most instances, support
is now available directly from the
graphics chip manufacturers, who
continuously improve and apply quality
assurance to their drivers.
By leveraging the native rotation
capabilities now provided by ATI,
nVidia, Intel, Matrox, S3, XGI and
others, iRotate offers exceptional
speed and efficiency, with minimal
impact on scarce system resources -
the entire iRotate package, including
installation, documentation, and
native language support in all the
major European and Asian languages,
weighs in at only 125kb. And like all
EnTech graphics utilities, iRotate
supports multiple graphics cards from
various vendors, simultaneously, under
every multi-monitor enabled operating
system from Windows 98 to Vista.
Seems like a decent utility, but I'm not a big fan of installing extra widgets, and in my case it's not an option anyways.
– Pops
Oct 10 '09 at 1:22
1
I love that you have graphics cards from all the major vendors installed at once.
– Joel B
May 13 '13 at 17:02
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
The free product iRotate handles multiple monitors:
iRotate provides convenient access to
the native rotation capabilities
present in contemporary display
drivers, via a popup menu accessible
from the system tray and optional
system-wide hotkeys. It's no longer
necessary to resort to bloated Windows
hacks, additional software layers or
phantom drivers to achieve content
rotation. In most instances, support
is now available directly from the
graphics chip manufacturers, who
continuously improve and apply quality
assurance to their drivers.
By leveraging the native rotation
capabilities now provided by ATI,
nVidia, Intel, Matrox, S3, XGI and
others, iRotate offers exceptional
speed and efficiency, with minimal
impact on scarce system resources -
the entire iRotate package, including
installation, documentation, and
native language support in all the
major European and Asian languages,
weighs in at only 125kb. And like all
EnTech graphics utilities, iRotate
supports multiple graphics cards from
various vendors, simultaneously, under
every multi-monitor enabled operating
system from Windows 98 to Vista.
Seems like a decent utility, but I'm not a big fan of installing extra widgets, and in my case it's not an option anyways.
– Pops
Oct 10 '09 at 1:22
1
I love that you have graphics cards from all the major vendors installed at once.
– Joel B
May 13 '13 at 17:02
add a comment |
up vote
4
down vote
up vote
4
down vote
The free product iRotate handles multiple monitors:
iRotate provides convenient access to
the native rotation capabilities
present in contemporary display
drivers, via a popup menu accessible
from the system tray and optional
system-wide hotkeys. It's no longer
necessary to resort to bloated Windows
hacks, additional software layers or
phantom drivers to achieve content
rotation. In most instances, support
is now available directly from the
graphics chip manufacturers, who
continuously improve and apply quality
assurance to their drivers.
By leveraging the native rotation
capabilities now provided by ATI,
nVidia, Intel, Matrox, S3, XGI and
others, iRotate offers exceptional
speed and efficiency, with minimal
impact on scarce system resources -
the entire iRotate package, including
installation, documentation, and
native language support in all the
major European and Asian languages,
weighs in at only 125kb. And like all
EnTech graphics utilities, iRotate
supports multiple graphics cards from
various vendors, simultaneously, under
every multi-monitor enabled operating
system from Windows 98 to Vista.
The free product iRotate handles multiple monitors:
iRotate provides convenient access to
the native rotation capabilities
present in contemporary display
drivers, via a popup menu accessible
from the system tray and optional
system-wide hotkeys. It's no longer
necessary to resort to bloated Windows
hacks, additional software layers or
phantom drivers to achieve content
rotation. In most instances, support
is now available directly from the
graphics chip manufacturers, who
continuously improve and apply quality
assurance to their drivers.
By leveraging the native rotation
capabilities now provided by ATI,
nVidia, Intel, Matrox, S3, XGI and
others, iRotate offers exceptional
speed and efficiency, with minimal
impact on scarce system resources -
the entire iRotate package, including
installation, documentation, and
native language support in all the
major European and Asian languages,
weighs in at only 125kb. And like all
EnTech graphics utilities, iRotate
supports multiple graphics cards from
various vendors, simultaneously, under
every multi-monitor enabled operating
system from Windows 98 to Vista.
edited Aug 16 '11 at 8:10
3498DB
15.6k114762
15.6k114762
answered Oct 9 '09 at 18:13
harrymc
249k10257550
249k10257550
Seems like a decent utility, but I'm not a big fan of installing extra widgets, and in my case it's not an option anyways.
– Pops
Oct 10 '09 at 1:22
1
I love that you have graphics cards from all the major vendors installed at once.
– Joel B
May 13 '13 at 17:02
add a comment |
Seems like a decent utility, but I'm not a big fan of installing extra widgets, and in my case it's not an option anyways.
– Pops
Oct 10 '09 at 1:22
1
I love that you have graphics cards from all the major vendors installed at once.
– Joel B
May 13 '13 at 17:02
Seems like a decent utility, but I'm not a big fan of installing extra widgets, and in my case it's not an option anyways.
– Pops
Oct 10 '09 at 1:22
Seems like a decent utility, but I'm not a big fan of installing extra widgets, and in my case it's not an option anyways.
– Pops
Oct 10 '09 at 1:22
1
1
I love that you have graphics cards from all the major vendors installed at once.
– Joel B
May 13 '13 at 17:02
I love that you have graphics cards from all the major vendors installed at once.
– Joel B
May 13 '13 at 17:02
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
On Windows 10, with Intel graphics:
Method 1:
Right click on the desktop and select 'Display Settings' (or get here from any of the other many ways possible).
Click on 'Advanced display settings' at the bottom.
Click on 'Display adapter properties' at the bottom of the screen.
Click on the 'Intel (r) HD Graphics Control Panel' tab.
Select the display for which you need to change the rotation.
On the 'Rotation' setting, click on the desired rotation option and click ok.
Method 2: (which I just found right after I used Method 1)
Right click on the desktop and select the 'Graphics Options' menu.
Select the 'Rotation' sub menu.
Select the display for which you need rotation to be set in the next sub menu.
Select the rotation option from the final sub menu.
Method 3:
CTRL+ALT+[Arrow Key] works in this scenario as well. Note that this rotates the monitor on which the mouse pointer is on.
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
On Windows 10, with Intel graphics:
Method 1:
Right click on the desktop and select 'Display Settings' (or get here from any of the other many ways possible).
Click on 'Advanced display settings' at the bottom.
Click on 'Display adapter properties' at the bottom of the screen.
Click on the 'Intel (r) HD Graphics Control Panel' tab.
Select the display for which you need to change the rotation.
On the 'Rotation' setting, click on the desired rotation option and click ok.
Method 2: (which I just found right after I used Method 1)
Right click on the desktop and select the 'Graphics Options' menu.
Select the 'Rotation' sub menu.
Select the display for which you need rotation to be set in the next sub menu.
Select the rotation option from the final sub menu.
Method 3:
CTRL+ALT+[Arrow Key] works in this scenario as well. Note that this rotates the monitor on which the mouse pointer is on.
add a comment |
up vote
3
down vote
up vote
3
down vote
On Windows 10, with Intel graphics:
Method 1:
Right click on the desktop and select 'Display Settings' (or get here from any of the other many ways possible).
Click on 'Advanced display settings' at the bottom.
Click on 'Display adapter properties' at the bottom of the screen.
Click on the 'Intel (r) HD Graphics Control Panel' tab.
Select the display for which you need to change the rotation.
On the 'Rotation' setting, click on the desired rotation option and click ok.
Method 2: (which I just found right after I used Method 1)
Right click on the desktop and select the 'Graphics Options' menu.
Select the 'Rotation' sub menu.
Select the display for which you need rotation to be set in the next sub menu.
Select the rotation option from the final sub menu.
Method 3:
CTRL+ALT+[Arrow Key] works in this scenario as well. Note that this rotates the monitor on which the mouse pointer is on.
On Windows 10, with Intel graphics:
Method 1:
Right click on the desktop and select 'Display Settings' (or get here from any of the other many ways possible).
Click on 'Advanced display settings' at the bottom.
Click on 'Display adapter properties' at the bottom of the screen.
Click on the 'Intel (r) HD Graphics Control Panel' tab.
Select the display for which you need to change the rotation.
On the 'Rotation' setting, click on the desired rotation option and click ok.
Method 2: (which I just found right after I used Method 1)
Right click on the desktop and select the 'Graphics Options' menu.
Select the 'Rotation' sub menu.
Select the display for which you need rotation to be set in the next sub menu.
Select the rotation option from the final sub menu.
Method 3:
CTRL+ALT+[Arrow Key] works in this scenario as well. Note that this rotates the monitor on which the mouse pointer is on.
edited Jan 19 '17 at 17:50
answered Jan 19 '17 at 17:37
thilina R
2,11541633
2,11541633
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
accepted
This is the solution I ended up using. It's probably specific to my graphics card, but it's probably at least similar to other cards' methods.
-Go to the regular display settings window (open a context menu from the desktop and select Properties)
-Go to the settings tab and click on the monitor to rotate
-Click Advanced
-Select the graphics card's tab -- in my case, the Quadro tab -- and choose the rotation menu item -- in my case, "NVRotate" from the popout menu
-Select the radio button for the desired orientation and click Apply
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
accepted
This is the solution I ended up using. It's probably specific to my graphics card, but it's probably at least similar to other cards' methods.
-Go to the regular display settings window (open a context menu from the desktop and select Properties)
-Go to the settings tab and click on the monitor to rotate
-Click Advanced
-Select the graphics card's tab -- in my case, the Quadro tab -- and choose the rotation menu item -- in my case, "NVRotate" from the popout menu
-Select the radio button for the desired orientation and click Apply
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
accepted
up vote
2
down vote
accepted
This is the solution I ended up using. It's probably specific to my graphics card, but it's probably at least similar to other cards' methods.
-Go to the regular display settings window (open a context menu from the desktop and select Properties)
-Go to the settings tab and click on the monitor to rotate
-Click Advanced
-Select the graphics card's tab -- in my case, the Quadro tab -- and choose the rotation menu item -- in my case, "NVRotate" from the popout menu
-Select the radio button for the desired orientation and click Apply
This is the solution I ended up using. It's probably specific to my graphics card, but it's probably at least similar to other cards' methods.
-Go to the regular display settings window (open a context menu from the desktop and select Properties)
-Go to the settings tab and click on the monitor to rotate
-Click Advanced
-Select the graphics card's tab -- in my case, the Quadro tab -- and choose the rotation menu item -- in my case, "NVRotate" from the popout menu
-Select the radio button for the desired orientation and click Apply
answered Oct 10 '09 at 1:17
Pops
4,650246390
4,650246390
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
- /open/ Control Panel
- /click/ Appearance and Personalization
- /click/ adjust Screen Resolutions
- /change setting/ display: (name first monitor) --> (name second screen)
- /change setting/ orientation: (Landscape) --> (Portrait)
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
- /open/ Control Panel
- /click/ Appearance and Personalization
- /click/ adjust Screen Resolutions
- /change setting/ display: (name first monitor) --> (name second screen)
- /change setting/ orientation: (Landscape) --> (Portrait)
add a comment |
up vote
2
down vote
up vote
2
down vote
- /open/ Control Panel
- /click/ Appearance and Personalization
- /click/ adjust Screen Resolutions
- /change setting/ display: (name first monitor) --> (name second screen)
- /change setting/ orientation: (Landscape) --> (Portrait)
- /open/ Control Panel
- /click/ Appearance and Personalization
- /click/ adjust Screen Resolutions
- /change setting/ display: (name first monitor) --> (name second screen)
- /change setting/ orientation: (Landscape) --> (Portrait)
answered Sep 18 '16 at 10:39
Mrreal LJ
311
311
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
This stuff's in your drivers, assuming you run windows, so simply install them. You may have to go through the card's control thingy (As in, Catalyst for ATI, or the nVidia control panel) instead of the windows dialogue, I did.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
This stuff's in your drivers, assuming you run windows, so simply install them. You may have to go through the card's control thingy (As in, Catalyst for ATI, or the nVidia control panel) instead of the windows dialogue, I did.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
This stuff's in your drivers, assuming you run windows, so simply install them. You may have to go through the card's control thingy (As in, Catalyst for ATI, or the nVidia control panel) instead of the windows dialogue, I did.
This stuff's in your drivers, assuming you run windows, so simply install them. You may have to go through the card's control thingy (As in, Catalyst for ATI, or the nVidia control panel) instead of the windows dialogue, I did.
answered Oct 9 '09 at 15:54
Phoshi
21k25277
21k25277
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
@thiliana R’s answer is great. Thanks a lot.
His answer was for Windows 10
. I built on his answer and show the difference for Windows 7 here.
Method 1
Right click on your desktop, and click on
Screen Resolution
:Choose
Advanced Settings
Click on `Intel HD Graphics Control Pane
Under Display: select ‘Digital Display`
Under Rotation: select ‘Rotate to 90 degrees`
Method 2:
1. Right click on your desktop, and select Graphics Options
Select
Rotation
from the popup windowSelect
Digital Display
Select
Rotate to 90 degrees
I couldn’t get the Cntrl
+Alt
+Arrow
to work on my Windows 7 machine.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
@thiliana R’s answer is great. Thanks a lot.
His answer was for Windows 10
. I built on his answer and show the difference for Windows 7 here.
Method 1
Right click on your desktop, and click on
Screen Resolution
:Choose
Advanced Settings
Click on `Intel HD Graphics Control Pane
Under Display: select ‘Digital Display`
Under Rotation: select ‘Rotate to 90 degrees`
Method 2:
1. Right click on your desktop, and select Graphics Options
Select
Rotation
from the popup windowSelect
Digital Display
Select
Rotate to 90 degrees
I couldn’t get the Cntrl
+Alt
+Arrow
to work on my Windows 7 machine.
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
@thiliana R’s answer is great. Thanks a lot.
His answer was for Windows 10
. I built on his answer and show the difference for Windows 7 here.
Method 1
Right click on your desktop, and click on
Screen Resolution
:Choose
Advanced Settings
Click on `Intel HD Graphics Control Pane
Under Display: select ‘Digital Display`
Under Rotation: select ‘Rotate to 90 degrees`
Method 2:
1. Right click on your desktop, and select Graphics Options
Select
Rotation
from the popup windowSelect
Digital Display
Select
Rotate to 90 degrees
I couldn’t get the Cntrl
+Alt
+Arrow
to work on my Windows 7 machine.
@thiliana R’s answer is great. Thanks a lot.
His answer was for Windows 10
. I built on his answer and show the difference for Windows 7 here.
Method 1
Right click on your desktop, and click on
Screen Resolution
:Choose
Advanced Settings
Click on `Intel HD Graphics Control Pane
Under Display: select ‘Digital Display`
Under Rotation: select ‘Rotate to 90 degrees`
Method 2:
1. Right click on your desktop, and select Graphics Options
Select
Rotation
from the popup windowSelect
Digital Display
Select
Rotate to 90 degrees
I couldn’t get the Cntrl
+Alt
+Arrow
to work on my Windows 7 machine.
answered Jan 31 at 21:08
alpha_989
33926
33926
add a comment |
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Follow thilina's advice until you get to the monitor page. Click "Graphics Properties", the button with the Intel blue chip on the left side. Go to the rotation area. Make sure you are on your 2nd monitor on the dropdown menu. Rotate it. Boom. Done.
Are you sure Boom is the desired result?
– Pierre.Vriens
Nov 20 at 15:55
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Follow thilina's advice until you get to the monitor page. Click "Graphics Properties", the button with the Intel blue chip on the left side. Go to the rotation area. Make sure you are on your 2nd monitor on the dropdown menu. Rotate it. Boom. Done.
Are you sure Boom is the desired result?
– Pierre.Vriens
Nov 20 at 15:55
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
Follow thilina's advice until you get to the monitor page. Click "Graphics Properties", the button with the Intel blue chip on the left side. Go to the rotation area. Make sure you are on your 2nd monitor on the dropdown menu. Rotate it. Boom. Done.
Follow thilina's advice until you get to the monitor page. Click "Graphics Properties", the button with the Intel blue chip on the left side. Go to the rotation area. Make sure you are on your 2nd monitor on the dropdown menu. Rotate it. Boom. Done.
answered Nov 20 at 15:36
Greg Klein
1
1
Are you sure Boom is the desired result?
– Pierre.Vriens
Nov 20 at 15:55
add a comment |
Are you sure Boom is the desired result?
– Pierre.Vriens
Nov 20 at 15:55
Are you sure Boom is the desired result?
– Pierre.Vriens
Nov 20 at 15:55
Are you sure Boom is the desired result?
– Pierre.Vriens
Nov 20 at 15:55
add a comment |
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2
You should be able to do this in the Nvidia or ATI Control Panel.
– Ben S
Oct 9 '09 at 15:55