How can I horizontally flip/invert my monitor (not rotate)?











up vote
11
down vote

favorite
2












I have searched dozens of forums for this solution on multiple occasions, and the answers are always instructions on monitor rotation or simply, Why do you need to do that anyway?



Yes, I can rotate my monitor, but that doesn't address my need. I work with amputees and have a virtual model of a right arm that they control in real time using advanced surface electrode control strategies. I've been stuck using this right hand virtual arm with individuals who lost their left arms, and that can be distracting. Until an identical model exists for both arms, I'd like to simply flip or invert the screen horizontally to produce a mirror image. This would give me a left arm model that would function just like the right. I make the arm a full screen image, so there is no concern about backwards text, etc. It would be nice to toggle back and forth with this monitor flipping, but that's not critical.



I run the signal processing, decoding, and visualization on an ASUS G75 with the NVidia GeForce GTX 660M. The computer can handle quite a bit, so even if the proposed solution was CPU intensive, I don't think that would keep me from running the real-time simulations I use.



There are no built-in inverting features in the NVidia control panel that I can find. There are plenty of flipping options, but there are no mirroring or inverting options. Any suggestions are much appreciated.



Updates: I am using Windows 7. The Ctrl+Alt+Arrows are shortcut keys to rotate the display. Suggested answers to the identical question from a couple years ago are all either 1) rotation tips, 2) Why do this anyway? or 3) use your video card's built-in features. I addressed all of these in previous paragraphs. Perhaps it is not possible with my NVidia GeForce GTX 660M and Windows 7.










share|improve this question
























  • It might not be possible.
    – BenjiWiebe
    Feb 20 '13 at 3:40






  • 1




    What I can imagine is to use two monitors. Then you use a screen capture program to "film" the other. And then somehow you replay that video in real time on the other monitor, with a mirror "filter" enabled. OR you could just look into finding someone to design you a set of actual mirrors. Surely that's doable.
    – Ariane
    Dec 1 '13 at 16:54






  • 1




    With old CRT monitors you'd get someone to swap the leads on the yoke. Dunno of a way to do that here. But it seems to me that the problem is with your simulator software -- it ought to be capable of flipping to the opposite orientation -- a very simple thing at that level. Have you contacted the outfit that created that software?
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Jan 4 '14 at 13:50










  • > "I run the signal processing, decoding, and visualization" If you have access to the source code for this it should be possible with some small programming component.
    – RJFalconer
    Sep 9 '14 at 10:48






  • 1




    Honestly a physical mirror may be easiest. Arcade machines used them.
    – LawrenceC
    Sep 9 '14 at 12:15















up vote
11
down vote

favorite
2












I have searched dozens of forums for this solution on multiple occasions, and the answers are always instructions on monitor rotation or simply, Why do you need to do that anyway?



Yes, I can rotate my monitor, but that doesn't address my need. I work with amputees and have a virtual model of a right arm that they control in real time using advanced surface electrode control strategies. I've been stuck using this right hand virtual arm with individuals who lost their left arms, and that can be distracting. Until an identical model exists for both arms, I'd like to simply flip or invert the screen horizontally to produce a mirror image. This would give me a left arm model that would function just like the right. I make the arm a full screen image, so there is no concern about backwards text, etc. It would be nice to toggle back and forth with this monitor flipping, but that's not critical.



I run the signal processing, decoding, and visualization on an ASUS G75 with the NVidia GeForce GTX 660M. The computer can handle quite a bit, so even if the proposed solution was CPU intensive, I don't think that would keep me from running the real-time simulations I use.



There are no built-in inverting features in the NVidia control panel that I can find. There are plenty of flipping options, but there are no mirroring or inverting options. Any suggestions are much appreciated.



Updates: I am using Windows 7. The Ctrl+Alt+Arrows are shortcut keys to rotate the display. Suggested answers to the identical question from a couple years ago are all either 1) rotation tips, 2) Why do this anyway? or 3) use your video card's built-in features. I addressed all of these in previous paragraphs. Perhaps it is not possible with my NVidia GeForce GTX 660M and Windows 7.










share|improve this question
























  • It might not be possible.
    – BenjiWiebe
    Feb 20 '13 at 3:40






  • 1




    What I can imagine is to use two monitors. Then you use a screen capture program to "film" the other. And then somehow you replay that video in real time on the other monitor, with a mirror "filter" enabled. OR you could just look into finding someone to design you a set of actual mirrors. Surely that's doable.
    – Ariane
    Dec 1 '13 at 16:54






  • 1




    With old CRT monitors you'd get someone to swap the leads on the yoke. Dunno of a way to do that here. But it seems to me that the problem is with your simulator software -- it ought to be capable of flipping to the opposite orientation -- a very simple thing at that level. Have you contacted the outfit that created that software?
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Jan 4 '14 at 13:50










  • > "I run the signal processing, decoding, and visualization" If you have access to the source code for this it should be possible with some small programming component.
    – RJFalconer
    Sep 9 '14 at 10:48






  • 1




    Honestly a physical mirror may be easiest. Arcade machines used them.
    – LawrenceC
    Sep 9 '14 at 12:15













up vote
11
down vote

favorite
2









up vote
11
down vote

favorite
2






2





I have searched dozens of forums for this solution on multiple occasions, and the answers are always instructions on monitor rotation or simply, Why do you need to do that anyway?



Yes, I can rotate my monitor, but that doesn't address my need. I work with amputees and have a virtual model of a right arm that they control in real time using advanced surface electrode control strategies. I've been stuck using this right hand virtual arm with individuals who lost their left arms, and that can be distracting. Until an identical model exists for both arms, I'd like to simply flip or invert the screen horizontally to produce a mirror image. This would give me a left arm model that would function just like the right. I make the arm a full screen image, so there is no concern about backwards text, etc. It would be nice to toggle back and forth with this monitor flipping, but that's not critical.



I run the signal processing, decoding, and visualization on an ASUS G75 with the NVidia GeForce GTX 660M. The computer can handle quite a bit, so even if the proposed solution was CPU intensive, I don't think that would keep me from running the real-time simulations I use.



There are no built-in inverting features in the NVidia control panel that I can find. There are plenty of flipping options, but there are no mirroring or inverting options. Any suggestions are much appreciated.



Updates: I am using Windows 7. The Ctrl+Alt+Arrows are shortcut keys to rotate the display. Suggested answers to the identical question from a couple years ago are all either 1) rotation tips, 2) Why do this anyway? or 3) use your video card's built-in features. I addressed all of these in previous paragraphs. Perhaps it is not possible with my NVidia GeForce GTX 660M and Windows 7.










share|improve this question















I have searched dozens of forums for this solution on multiple occasions, and the answers are always instructions on monitor rotation or simply, Why do you need to do that anyway?



Yes, I can rotate my monitor, but that doesn't address my need. I work with amputees and have a virtual model of a right arm that they control in real time using advanced surface electrode control strategies. I've been stuck using this right hand virtual arm with individuals who lost their left arms, and that can be distracting. Until an identical model exists for both arms, I'd like to simply flip or invert the screen horizontally to produce a mirror image. This would give me a left arm model that would function just like the right. I make the arm a full screen image, so there is no concern about backwards text, etc. It would be nice to toggle back and forth with this monitor flipping, but that's not critical.



I run the signal processing, decoding, and visualization on an ASUS G75 with the NVidia GeForce GTX 660M. The computer can handle quite a bit, so even if the proposed solution was CPU intensive, I don't think that would keep me from running the real-time simulations I use.



There are no built-in inverting features in the NVidia control panel that I can find. There are plenty of flipping options, but there are no mirroring or inverting options. Any suggestions are much appreciated.



Updates: I am using Windows 7. The Ctrl+Alt+Arrows are shortcut keys to rotate the display. Suggested answers to the identical question from a couple years ago are all either 1) rotation tips, 2) Why do this anyway? or 3) use your video card's built-in features. I addressed all of these in previous paragraphs. Perhaps it is not possible with my NVidia GeForce GTX 660M and Windows 7.







display nvidia-geforce






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Feb 20 '13 at 8:32









Community

1




1










asked Feb 20 '13 at 2:54









Mike

56113




56113












  • It might not be possible.
    – BenjiWiebe
    Feb 20 '13 at 3:40






  • 1




    What I can imagine is to use two monitors. Then you use a screen capture program to "film" the other. And then somehow you replay that video in real time on the other monitor, with a mirror "filter" enabled. OR you could just look into finding someone to design you a set of actual mirrors. Surely that's doable.
    – Ariane
    Dec 1 '13 at 16:54






  • 1




    With old CRT monitors you'd get someone to swap the leads on the yoke. Dunno of a way to do that here. But it seems to me that the problem is with your simulator software -- it ought to be capable of flipping to the opposite orientation -- a very simple thing at that level. Have you contacted the outfit that created that software?
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Jan 4 '14 at 13:50










  • > "I run the signal processing, decoding, and visualization" If you have access to the source code for this it should be possible with some small programming component.
    – RJFalconer
    Sep 9 '14 at 10:48






  • 1




    Honestly a physical mirror may be easiest. Arcade machines used them.
    – LawrenceC
    Sep 9 '14 at 12:15


















  • It might not be possible.
    – BenjiWiebe
    Feb 20 '13 at 3:40






  • 1




    What I can imagine is to use two monitors. Then you use a screen capture program to "film" the other. And then somehow you replay that video in real time on the other monitor, with a mirror "filter" enabled. OR you could just look into finding someone to design you a set of actual mirrors. Surely that's doable.
    – Ariane
    Dec 1 '13 at 16:54






  • 1




    With old CRT monitors you'd get someone to swap the leads on the yoke. Dunno of a way to do that here. But it seems to me that the problem is with your simulator software -- it ought to be capable of flipping to the opposite orientation -- a very simple thing at that level. Have you contacted the outfit that created that software?
    – Daniel R Hicks
    Jan 4 '14 at 13:50










  • > "I run the signal processing, decoding, and visualization" If you have access to the source code for this it should be possible with some small programming component.
    – RJFalconer
    Sep 9 '14 at 10:48






  • 1




    Honestly a physical mirror may be easiest. Arcade machines used them.
    – LawrenceC
    Sep 9 '14 at 12:15
















It might not be possible.
– BenjiWiebe
Feb 20 '13 at 3:40




It might not be possible.
– BenjiWiebe
Feb 20 '13 at 3:40




1




1




What I can imagine is to use two monitors. Then you use a screen capture program to "film" the other. And then somehow you replay that video in real time on the other monitor, with a mirror "filter" enabled. OR you could just look into finding someone to design you a set of actual mirrors. Surely that's doable.
– Ariane
Dec 1 '13 at 16:54




What I can imagine is to use two monitors. Then you use a screen capture program to "film" the other. And then somehow you replay that video in real time on the other monitor, with a mirror "filter" enabled. OR you could just look into finding someone to design you a set of actual mirrors. Surely that's doable.
– Ariane
Dec 1 '13 at 16:54




1




1




With old CRT monitors you'd get someone to swap the leads on the yoke. Dunno of a way to do that here. But it seems to me that the problem is with your simulator software -- it ought to be capable of flipping to the opposite orientation -- a very simple thing at that level. Have you contacted the outfit that created that software?
– Daniel R Hicks
Jan 4 '14 at 13:50




With old CRT monitors you'd get someone to swap the leads on the yoke. Dunno of a way to do that here. But it seems to me that the problem is with your simulator software -- it ought to be capable of flipping to the opposite orientation -- a very simple thing at that level. Have you contacted the outfit that created that software?
– Daniel R Hicks
Jan 4 '14 at 13:50












> "I run the signal processing, decoding, and visualization" If you have access to the source code for this it should be possible with some small programming component.
– RJFalconer
Sep 9 '14 at 10:48




> "I run the signal processing, decoding, and visualization" If you have access to the source code for this it should be possible with some small programming component.
– RJFalconer
Sep 9 '14 at 10:48




1




1




Honestly a physical mirror may be easiest. Arcade machines used them.
– LawrenceC
Sep 9 '14 at 12:15




Honestly a physical mirror may be easiest. Arcade machines used them.
– LawrenceC
Sep 9 '14 at 12:15










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
3
down vote













Try UltraMon. It lets you flip both vertically and horizantally (independently). It also provides a number of other useful features for using multiple monitors.






share|improve this answer





















  • This "mirrors" the monitor? Or rotates it?
    – BenjiWiebe
    Jun 17 '14 at 14:14












  • I don't know why Rick didn't respond — although it looks like answering this question was the one and only thing he ever did on Stack Exchange.  realtimesoft.com/ultramon/tour/mirroring.asp suggests that UltraMon can mirror one or more (entire) monitors, only a single application, part of the desktop, or the area around the mouse pointer.
    – Scott
    Apr 14 '15 at 21:20


















up vote
1
down vote













There is a Chrome extension called Flip This: Check out "Flip this".






share|improve this answer






























    up vote
    1
    down vote













    "Ultramon" can do this. You have an evaluation version for 30 days. You may need at least 2 monitors.



    Ultramon can really flip the monitor like if you are looking at it in a mirror if you want to read something on your monitor you need a mirror because it is reverse.




    1. right click on the icon in the task bar,

    2. click mirror in ----->>> setting ----->>> one or two monitor

    3. select the monitor on witch you want so see flipped.

    4. click flip horizontally (or vertically) then you have a flipped screen.


    End result:



    enter image description here






    share|improve this answer























    • why -1 ? ultramon can really flip the monitor like if you are looking at it in a morror if you want to read something on your monitor you need a mirror because it is reverse. how to do it??
      – Jeff Gravel
      Sep 9 '14 at 10:19




















    up vote
    1
    down vote













    I had the same need for a content displayed within a browser, where I ended up using CSS tip to flip the element :



        transform: scaleX(-1);


    Not sure it applies to OP situation, but could help others.






    share|improve this answer





















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      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes








      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes








      up vote
      3
      down vote













      Try UltraMon. It lets you flip both vertically and horizantally (independently). It also provides a number of other useful features for using multiple monitors.






      share|improve this answer





















      • This "mirrors" the monitor? Or rotates it?
        – BenjiWiebe
        Jun 17 '14 at 14:14












      • I don't know why Rick didn't respond — although it looks like answering this question was the one and only thing he ever did on Stack Exchange.  realtimesoft.com/ultramon/tour/mirroring.asp suggests that UltraMon can mirror one or more (entire) monitors, only a single application, part of the desktop, or the area around the mouse pointer.
        – Scott
        Apr 14 '15 at 21:20















      up vote
      3
      down vote













      Try UltraMon. It lets you flip both vertically and horizantally (independently). It also provides a number of other useful features for using multiple monitors.






      share|improve this answer





















      • This "mirrors" the monitor? Or rotates it?
        – BenjiWiebe
        Jun 17 '14 at 14:14












      • I don't know why Rick didn't respond — although it looks like answering this question was the one and only thing he ever did on Stack Exchange.  realtimesoft.com/ultramon/tour/mirroring.asp suggests that UltraMon can mirror one or more (entire) monitors, only a single application, part of the desktop, or the area around the mouse pointer.
        – Scott
        Apr 14 '15 at 21:20













      up vote
      3
      down vote










      up vote
      3
      down vote









      Try UltraMon. It lets you flip both vertically and horizantally (independently). It also provides a number of other useful features for using multiple monitors.






      share|improve this answer












      Try UltraMon. It lets you flip both vertically and horizantally (independently). It also provides a number of other useful features for using multiple monitors.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Jun 17 '14 at 14:12









      Rick Worsnop

      312




      312












      • This "mirrors" the monitor? Or rotates it?
        – BenjiWiebe
        Jun 17 '14 at 14:14












      • I don't know why Rick didn't respond — although it looks like answering this question was the one and only thing he ever did on Stack Exchange.  realtimesoft.com/ultramon/tour/mirroring.asp suggests that UltraMon can mirror one or more (entire) monitors, only a single application, part of the desktop, or the area around the mouse pointer.
        – Scott
        Apr 14 '15 at 21:20


















      • This "mirrors" the monitor? Or rotates it?
        – BenjiWiebe
        Jun 17 '14 at 14:14












      • I don't know why Rick didn't respond — although it looks like answering this question was the one and only thing he ever did on Stack Exchange.  realtimesoft.com/ultramon/tour/mirroring.asp suggests that UltraMon can mirror one or more (entire) monitors, only a single application, part of the desktop, or the area around the mouse pointer.
        – Scott
        Apr 14 '15 at 21:20
















      This "mirrors" the monitor? Or rotates it?
      – BenjiWiebe
      Jun 17 '14 at 14:14






      This "mirrors" the monitor? Or rotates it?
      – BenjiWiebe
      Jun 17 '14 at 14:14














      I don't know why Rick didn't respond — although it looks like answering this question was the one and only thing he ever did on Stack Exchange.  realtimesoft.com/ultramon/tour/mirroring.asp suggests that UltraMon can mirror one or more (entire) monitors, only a single application, part of the desktop, or the area around the mouse pointer.
      – Scott
      Apr 14 '15 at 21:20




      I don't know why Rick didn't respond — although it looks like answering this question was the one and only thing he ever did on Stack Exchange.  realtimesoft.com/ultramon/tour/mirroring.asp suggests that UltraMon can mirror one or more (entire) monitors, only a single application, part of the desktop, or the area around the mouse pointer.
      – Scott
      Apr 14 '15 at 21:20












      up vote
      1
      down vote













      There is a Chrome extension called Flip This: Check out "Flip this".






      share|improve this answer



























        up vote
        1
        down vote













        There is a Chrome extension called Flip This: Check out "Flip this".






        share|improve this answer

























          up vote
          1
          down vote










          up vote
          1
          down vote









          There is a Chrome extension called Flip This: Check out "Flip this".






          share|improve this answer














          There is a Chrome extension called Flip This: Check out "Flip this".







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Mar 1 '15 at 13:59









          Flyk

          1,36211928




          1,36211928










          answered Mar 1 '15 at 12:50









          Dan

          111




          111






















              up vote
              1
              down vote













              "Ultramon" can do this. You have an evaluation version for 30 days. You may need at least 2 monitors.



              Ultramon can really flip the monitor like if you are looking at it in a mirror if you want to read something on your monitor you need a mirror because it is reverse.




              1. right click on the icon in the task bar,

              2. click mirror in ----->>> setting ----->>> one or two monitor

              3. select the monitor on witch you want so see flipped.

              4. click flip horizontally (or vertically) then you have a flipped screen.


              End result:



              enter image description here






              share|improve this answer























              • why -1 ? ultramon can really flip the monitor like if you are looking at it in a morror if you want to read something on your monitor you need a mirror because it is reverse. how to do it??
                – Jeff Gravel
                Sep 9 '14 at 10:19

















              up vote
              1
              down vote













              "Ultramon" can do this. You have an evaluation version for 30 days. You may need at least 2 monitors.



              Ultramon can really flip the monitor like if you are looking at it in a mirror if you want to read something on your monitor you need a mirror because it is reverse.




              1. right click on the icon in the task bar,

              2. click mirror in ----->>> setting ----->>> one or two monitor

              3. select the monitor on witch you want so see flipped.

              4. click flip horizontally (or vertically) then you have a flipped screen.


              End result:



              enter image description here






              share|improve this answer























              • why -1 ? ultramon can really flip the monitor like if you are looking at it in a morror if you want to read something on your monitor you need a mirror because it is reverse. how to do it??
                – Jeff Gravel
                Sep 9 '14 at 10:19















              up vote
              1
              down vote










              up vote
              1
              down vote









              "Ultramon" can do this. You have an evaluation version for 30 days. You may need at least 2 monitors.



              Ultramon can really flip the monitor like if you are looking at it in a mirror if you want to read something on your monitor you need a mirror because it is reverse.




              1. right click on the icon in the task bar,

              2. click mirror in ----->>> setting ----->>> one or two monitor

              3. select the monitor on witch you want so see flipped.

              4. click flip horizontally (or vertically) then you have a flipped screen.


              End result:



              enter image description here






              share|improve this answer














              "Ultramon" can do this. You have an evaluation version for 30 days. You may need at least 2 monitors.



              Ultramon can really flip the monitor like if you are looking at it in a mirror if you want to read something on your monitor you need a mirror because it is reverse.




              1. right click on the icon in the task bar,

              2. click mirror in ----->>> setting ----->>> one or two monitor

              3. select the monitor on witch you want so see flipped.

              4. click flip horizontally (or vertically) then you have a flipped screen.


              End result:



              enter image description here







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited May 16 '17 at 15:27









              Pierre.Vriens

              1,20561218




              1,20561218










              answered Sep 9 '14 at 1:07









              Jeff Gravel

              295




              295












              • why -1 ? ultramon can really flip the monitor like if you are looking at it in a morror if you want to read something on your monitor you need a mirror because it is reverse. how to do it??
                – Jeff Gravel
                Sep 9 '14 at 10:19




















              • why -1 ? ultramon can really flip the monitor like if you are looking at it in a morror if you want to read something on your monitor you need a mirror because it is reverse. how to do it??
                – Jeff Gravel
                Sep 9 '14 at 10:19


















              why -1 ? ultramon can really flip the monitor like if you are looking at it in a morror if you want to read something on your monitor you need a mirror because it is reverse. how to do it??
              – Jeff Gravel
              Sep 9 '14 at 10:19






              why -1 ? ultramon can really flip the monitor like if you are looking at it in a morror if you want to read something on your monitor you need a mirror because it is reverse. how to do it??
              – Jeff Gravel
              Sep 9 '14 at 10:19












              up vote
              1
              down vote













              I had the same need for a content displayed within a browser, where I ended up using CSS tip to flip the element :



                  transform: scaleX(-1);


              Not sure it applies to OP situation, but could help others.






              share|improve this answer

























                up vote
                1
                down vote













                I had the same need for a content displayed within a browser, where I ended up using CSS tip to flip the element :



                    transform: scaleX(-1);


                Not sure it applies to OP situation, but could help others.






                share|improve this answer























                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote










                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote









                  I had the same need for a content displayed within a browser, where I ended up using CSS tip to flip the element :



                      transform: scaleX(-1);


                  Not sure it applies to OP situation, but could help others.






                  share|improve this answer












                  I had the same need for a content displayed within a browser, where I ended up using CSS tip to flip the element :



                      transform: scaleX(-1);


                  Not sure it applies to OP situation, but could help others.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Sep 23 at 11:02









                  Uriel

                  25124




                  25124






























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