Mouse enters the second monitor at different positions












0















When my mouse cursor is in monitor one it can be at height X, but when I move it horizontally to monitor 2, suddenly it's at height X+2cm. How do I fix this?



Picture



From the picture above you can see that when I have my mouse on the left and drag it horizontally to the right, following that red line trajectory, it suddenly jumps up. Is there a way to calibrate this in windows 10?










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    0















    When my mouse cursor is in monitor one it can be at height X, but when I move it horizontally to monitor 2, suddenly it's at height X+2cm. How do I fix this?



    Picture



    From the picture above you can see that when I have my mouse on the left and drag it horizontally to the right, following that red line trajectory, it suddenly jumps up. Is there a way to calibrate this in windows 10?










    share|improve this question



























      0












      0








      0








      When my mouse cursor is in monitor one it can be at height X, but when I move it horizontally to monitor 2, suddenly it's at height X+2cm. How do I fix this?



      Picture



      From the picture above you can see that when I have my mouse on the left and drag it horizontally to the right, following that red line trajectory, it suddenly jumps up. Is there a way to calibrate this in windows 10?










      share|improve this question
















      When my mouse cursor is in monitor one it can be at height X, but when I move it horizontally to monitor 2, suddenly it's at height X+2cm. How do I fix this?



      Picture



      From the picture above you can see that when I have my mouse on the left and drag it horizontally to the right, following that red line trajectory, it suddenly jumps up. Is there a way to calibrate this in windows 10?







      windows windows-10 mouse-cursor






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Dec 29 '18 at 17:15









      Appleoddity

      7,21521124




      7,21521124










      asked Dec 29 '18 at 12:00









      hey_youhey_you

      1031




      1031






















          2 Answers
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          0














          You can right click on the desktop -> Display Settings and align your monitors with the mouse (drag-drop)



          Align the monitors by drag-drop






          share|improve this answer


























          • thanks, this is what I did and it works!

            – hey_you
            Dec 29 '18 at 12:56



















          -1














          The path of the mouse is defined by pixels, not by physical dimensions. This implies:




          • If your monitors have exactly the same vertical PPI, you can fiddle with the vertical alignment of the screens - either by physically moving them or by adapting the display layout in the control panel.

          • If your monitors do not have the exact same vertical PPI, there is no way to make the mouse transitions exact for all screen positions. You can though try to make them exact in the middle and so reduce the offset at the top or bottom.






          share|improve this answer























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            2 Answers
            2






            active

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            2 Answers
            2






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            0














            You can right click on the desktop -> Display Settings and align your monitors with the mouse (drag-drop)



            Align the monitors by drag-drop






            share|improve this answer


























            • thanks, this is what I did and it works!

              – hey_you
              Dec 29 '18 at 12:56
















            0














            You can right click on the desktop -> Display Settings and align your monitors with the mouse (drag-drop)



            Align the monitors by drag-drop






            share|improve this answer


























            • thanks, this is what I did and it works!

              – hey_you
              Dec 29 '18 at 12:56














            0












            0








            0







            You can right click on the desktop -> Display Settings and align your monitors with the mouse (drag-drop)



            Align the monitors by drag-drop






            share|improve this answer















            You can right click on the desktop -> Display Settings and align your monitors with the mouse (drag-drop)



            Align the monitors by drag-drop







            share|improve this answer














            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer








            edited Dec 29 '18 at 17:16









            Appleoddity

            7,21521124




            7,21521124










            answered Dec 29 '18 at 12:52









            SwisstoneSwisstone

            28014




            28014













            • thanks, this is what I did and it works!

              – hey_you
              Dec 29 '18 at 12:56



















            • thanks, this is what I did and it works!

              – hey_you
              Dec 29 '18 at 12:56

















            thanks, this is what I did and it works!

            – hey_you
            Dec 29 '18 at 12:56





            thanks, this is what I did and it works!

            – hey_you
            Dec 29 '18 at 12:56













            -1














            The path of the mouse is defined by pixels, not by physical dimensions. This implies:




            • If your monitors have exactly the same vertical PPI, you can fiddle with the vertical alignment of the screens - either by physically moving them or by adapting the display layout in the control panel.

            • If your monitors do not have the exact same vertical PPI, there is no way to make the mouse transitions exact for all screen positions. You can though try to make them exact in the middle and so reduce the offset at the top or bottom.






            share|improve this answer




























              -1














              The path of the mouse is defined by pixels, not by physical dimensions. This implies:




              • If your monitors have exactly the same vertical PPI, you can fiddle with the vertical alignment of the screens - either by physically moving them or by adapting the display layout in the control panel.

              • If your monitors do not have the exact same vertical PPI, there is no way to make the mouse transitions exact for all screen positions. You can though try to make them exact in the middle and so reduce the offset at the top or bottom.






              share|improve this answer


























                -1












                -1








                -1







                The path of the mouse is defined by pixels, not by physical dimensions. This implies:




                • If your monitors have exactly the same vertical PPI, you can fiddle with the vertical alignment of the screens - either by physically moving them or by adapting the display layout in the control panel.

                • If your monitors do not have the exact same vertical PPI, there is no way to make the mouse transitions exact for all screen positions. You can though try to make them exact in the middle and so reduce the offset at the top or bottom.






                share|improve this answer













                The path of the mouse is defined by pixels, not by physical dimensions. This implies:




                • If your monitors have exactly the same vertical PPI, you can fiddle with the vertical alignment of the screens - either by physically moving them or by adapting the display layout in the control panel.

                • If your monitors do not have the exact same vertical PPI, there is no way to make the mouse transitions exact for all screen positions. You can though try to make them exact in the middle and so reduce the offset at the top or bottom.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Dec 29 '18 at 12:13









                Eugen RieckEugen Rieck

                9,96222128




                9,96222128






























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