Why doesn't Alt+Enter fullscreen work in Windows 10?
Did Microsoft change how fullscreen works? Previously, when clicking on a windowed game in Windows 8, it went automatically full screen. Now it stays windows. Which is fine, except I can't find a way to make it go full screen. Alt+Enter maximizes it but I still see the chrome and the action bar. What am I doing wrong?
I have a Nvidia graphics card if that is of relevance
windows-10
|
show 4 more comments
Did Microsoft change how fullscreen works? Previously, when clicking on a windowed game in Windows 8, it went automatically full screen. Now it stays windows. Which is fine, except I can't find a way to make it go full screen. Alt+Enter maximizes it but I still see the chrome and the action bar. What am I doing wrong?
I have a Nvidia graphics card if that is of relevance
windows-10
ALT+ENTER never did what you describe, if it did, then it was a function of that specific program. The keyboard shortcut you mention has not changed since Windows 7. Why don't you just enable fullscreen mode within the program's settings? The shortcut does the following "Open the properties for the selected object" that is all it does or ever did.
– Ramhound
Sep 1 '15 at 18:00
4
@Ramhound: ALT+ENTER to fullscreen a window is a common Windows shortcut - possibly just a convention, but one that Microsoft themselves used - dating back to at least Windows 95 and possibly to 16-bit Windows versions. It was frequently used for things like making a DOS program (running in a window) fill the screen, but was also used on many 32-bit programs. In fact, as of Win8.1 (I'm not on my Win10 box at the moment) it still works as an alternative to F11 to put IE11 in fullscreen mode.
– CBHacking
Sep 1 '15 at 18:04
1
@CBHacking - I can only tell the author what Microsoft says it actually does. I can tell you it does not place Chrome into fullscren mode, only F11 does that, so IE11 goes into fullscreen mode for a different reason. I can provide the keyboard shortcut list if you want.
– Ramhound
Sep 1 '15 at 18:07
2
That's for Explorer specifically, not Windows in general. Of course, that's true of all keyboard shortcuts; programs can override anything except CTRL+ALT+DEL. Whether MS put it on that list or not, ALT+ENTER is a common shortcut for "toggle full screen", in fact a number of my games use it too (though I haven't tried them on Win10). That comes back to the actual question, which seems to be "Why does Win10 still show window chrome when a game tries to go full screen"? As you say, the game is processing the shortcut, so Win10 is displaying "full screen" mode differently for some reason.
– CBHacking
Sep 1 '15 at 18:18
1
I have observed the behaviour both in Battlefield 4 and Dragon Age 3 Inquisition
– Nilzor
Sep 1 '15 at 20:13
|
show 4 more comments
Did Microsoft change how fullscreen works? Previously, when clicking on a windowed game in Windows 8, it went automatically full screen. Now it stays windows. Which is fine, except I can't find a way to make it go full screen. Alt+Enter maximizes it but I still see the chrome and the action bar. What am I doing wrong?
I have a Nvidia graphics card if that is of relevance
windows-10
Did Microsoft change how fullscreen works? Previously, when clicking on a windowed game in Windows 8, it went automatically full screen. Now it stays windows. Which is fine, except I can't find a way to make it go full screen. Alt+Enter maximizes it but I still see the chrome and the action bar. What am I doing wrong?
I have a Nvidia graphics card if that is of relevance
windows-10
windows-10
asked Sep 1 '15 at 17:42
NilzorNilzor
1,82151829
1,82151829
ALT+ENTER never did what you describe, if it did, then it was a function of that specific program. The keyboard shortcut you mention has not changed since Windows 7. Why don't you just enable fullscreen mode within the program's settings? The shortcut does the following "Open the properties for the selected object" that is all it does or ever did.
– Ramhound
Sep 1 '15 at 18:00
4
@Ramhound: ALT+ENTER to fullscreen a window is a common Windows shortcut - possibly just a convention, but one that Microsoft themselves used - dating back to at least Windows 95 and possibly to 16-bit Windows versions. It was frequently used for things like making a DOS program (running in a window) fill the screen, but was also used on many 32-bit programs. In fact, as of Win8.1 (I'm not on my Win10 box at the moment) it still works as an alternative to F11 to put IE11 in fullscreen mode.
– CBHacking
Sep 1 '15 at 18:04
1
@CBHacking - I can only tell the author what Microsoft says it actually does. I can tell you it does not place Chrome into fullscren mode, only F11 does that, so IE11 goes into fullscreen mode for a different reason. I can provide the keyboard shortcut list if you want.
– Ramhound
Sep 1 '15 at 18:07
2
That's for Explorer specifically, not Windows in general. Of course, that's true of all keyboard shortcuts; programs can override anything except CTRL+ALT+DEL. Whether MS put it on that list or not, ALT+ENTER is a common shortcut for "toggle full screen", in fact a number of my games use it too (though I haven't tried them on Win10). That comes back to the actual question, which seems to be "Why does Win10 still show window chrome when a game tries to go full screen"? As you say, the game is processing the shortcut, so Win10 is displaying "full screen" mode differently for some reason.
– CBHacking
Sep 1 '15 at 18:18
1
I have observed the behaviour both in Battlefield 4 and Dragon Age 3 Inquisition
– Nilzor
Sep 1 '15 at 20:13
|
show 4 more comments
ALT+ENTER never did what you describe, if it did, then it was a function of that specific program. The keyboard shortcut you mention has not changed since Windows 7. Why don't you just enable fullscreen mode within the program's settings? The shortcut does the following "Open the properties for the selected object" that is all it does or ever did.
– Ramhound
Sep 1 '15 at 18:00
4
@Ramhound: ALT+ENTER to fullscreen a window is a common Windows shortcut - possibly just a convention, but one that Microsoft themselves used - dating back to at least Windows 95 and possibly to 16-bit Windows versions. It was frequently used for things like making a DOS program (running in a window) fill the screen, but was also used on many 32-bit programs. In fact, as of Win8.1 (I'm not on my Win10 box at the moment) it still works as an alternative to F11 to put IE11 in fullscreen mode.
– CBHacking
Sep 1 '15 at 18:04
1
@CBHacking - I can only tell the author what Microsoft says it actually does. I can tell you it does not place Chrome into fullscren mode, only F11 does that, so IE11 goes into fullscreen mode for a different reason. I can provide the keyboard shortcut list if you want.
– Ramhound
Sep 1 '15 at 18:07
2
That's for Explorer specifically, not Windows in general. Of course, that's true of all keyboard shortcuts; programs can override anything except CTRL+ALT+DEL. Whether MS put it on that list or not, ALT+ENTER is a common shortcut for "toggle full screen", in fact a number of my games use it too (though I haven't tried them on Win10). That comes back to the actual question, which seems to be "Why does Win10 still show window chrome when a game tries to go full screen"? As you say, the game is processing the shortcut, so Win10 is displaying "full screen" mode differently for some reason.
– CBHacking
Sep 1 '15 at 18:18
1
I have observed the behaviour both in Battlefield 4 and Dragon Age 3 Inquisition
– Nilzor
Sep 1 '15 at 20:13
ALT+ENTER never did what you describe, if it did, then it was a function of that specific program. The keyboard shortcut you mention has not changed since Windows 7. Why don't you just enable fullscreen mode within the program's settings? The shortcut does the following "Open the properties for the selected object" that is all it does or ever did.
– Ramhound
Sep 1 '15 at 18:00
ALT+ENTER never did what you describe, if it did, then it was a function of that specific program. The keyboard shortcut you mention has not changed since Windows 7. Why don't you just enable fullscreen mode within the program's settings? The shortcut does the following "Open the properties for the selected object" that is all it does or ever did.
– Ramhound
Sep 1 '15 at 18:00
4
4
@Ramhound: ALT+ENTER to fullscreen a window is a common Windows shortcut - possibly just a convention, but one that Microsoft themselves used - dating back to at least Windows 95 and possibly to 16-bit Windows versions. It was frequently used for things like making a DOS program (running in a window) fill the screen, but was also used on many 32-bit programs. In fact, as of Win8.1 (I'm not on my Win10 box at the moment) it still works as an alternative to F11 to put IE11 in fullscreen mode.
– CBHacking
Sep 1 '15 at 18:04
@Ramhound: ALT+ENTER to fullscreen a window is a common Windows shortcut - possibly just a convention, but one that Microsoft themselves used - dating back to at least Windows 95 and possibly to 16-bit Windows versions. It was frequently used for things like making a DOS program (running in a window) fill the screen, but was also used on many 32-bit programs. In fact, as of Win8.1 (I'm not on my Win10 box at the moment) it still works as an alternative to F11 to put IE11 in fullscreen mode.
– CBHacking
Sep 1 '15 at 18:04
1
1
@CBHacking - I can only tell the author what Microsoft says it actually does. I can tell you it does not place Chrome into fullscren mode, only F11 does that, so IE11 goes into fullscreen mode for a different reason. I can provide the keyboard shortcut list if you want.
– Ramhound
Sep 1 '15 at 18:07
@CBHacking - I can only tell the author what Microsoft says it actually does. I can tell you it does not place Chrome into fullscren mode, only F11 does that, so IE11 goes into fullscreen mode for a different reason. I can provide the keyboard shortcut list if you want.
– Ramhound
Sep 1 '15 at 18:07
2
2
That's for Explorer specifically, not Windows in general. Of course, that's true of all keyboard shortcuts; programs can override anything except CTRL+ALT+DEL. Whether MS put it on that list or not, ALT+ENTER is a common shortcut for "toggle full screen", in fact a number of my games use it too (though I haven't tried them on Win10). That comes back to the actual question, which seems to be "Why does Win10 still show window chrome when a game tries to go full screen"? As you say, the game is processing the shortcut, so Win10 is displaying "full screen" mode differently for some reason.
– CBHacking
Sep 1 '15 at 18:18
That's for Explorer specifically, not Windows in general. Of course, that's true of all keyboard shortcuts; programs can override anything except CTRL+ALT+DEL. Whether MS put it on that list or not, ALT+ENTER is a common shortcut for "toggle full screen", in fact a number of my games use it too (though I haven't tried them on Win10). That comes back to the actual question, which seems to be "Why does Win10 still show window chrome when a game tries to go full screen"? As you say, the game is processing the shortcut, so Win10 is displaying "full screen" mode differently for some reason.
– CBHacking
Sep 1 '15 at 18:18
1
1
I have observed the behaviour both in Battlefield 4 and Dragon Age 3 Inquisition
– Nilzor
Sep 1 '15 at 20:13
I have observed the behaviour both in Battlefield 4 and Dragon Age 3 Inquisition
– Nilzor
Sep 1 '15 at 20:13
|
show 4 more comments
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Alt-Enter does not work for chrome (nor any other browser), as said above in the comments, it only works on microsoft related stuff (for example cmd). IF you're looking for something to work like that, use F11.
Edit: It works for some games too.
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Alt-Enter does not work for chrome (nor any other browser), as said above in the comments, it only works on microsoft related stuff (for example cmd). IF you're looking for something to work like that, use F11.
Edit: It works for some games too.
add a comment |
Alt-Enter does not work for chrome (nor any other browser), as said above in the comments, it only works on microsoft related stuff (for example cmd). IF you're looking for something to work like that, use F11.
Edit: It works for some games too.
add a comment |
Alt-Enter does not work for chrome (nor any other browser), as said above in the comments, it only works on microsoft related stuff (for example cmd). IF you're looking for something to work like that, use F11.
Edit: It works for some games too.
Alt-Enter does not work for chrome (nor any other browser), as said above in the comments, it only works on microsoft related stuff (for example cmd). IF you're looking for something to work like that, use F11.
Edit: It works for some games too.
edited Aug 2 '16 at 13:48
answered Aug 1 '16 at 13:11
7h3w1z4rd7h3w1z4rd
418623
418623
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ALT+ENTER never did what you describe, if it did, then it was a function of that specific program. The keyboard shortcut you mention has not changed since Windows 7. Why don't you just enable fullscreen mode within the program's settings? The shortcut does the following "Open the properties for the selected object" that is all it does or ever did.
– Ramhound
Sep 1 '15 at 18:00
4
@Ramhound: ALT+ENTER to fullscreen a window is a common Windows shortcut - possibly just a convention, but one that Microsoft themselves used - dating back to at least Windows 95 and possibly to 16-bit Windows versions. It was frequently used for things like making a DOS program (running in a window) fill the screen, but was also used on many 32-bit programs. In fact, as of Win8.1 (I'm not on my Win10 box at the moment) it still works as an alternative to F11 to put IE11 in fullscreen mode.
– CBHacking
Sep 1 '15 at 18:04
1
@CBHacking - I can only tell the author what Microsoft says it actually does. I can tell you it does not place Chrome into fullscren mode, only F11 does that, so IE11 goes into fullscreen mode for a different reason. I can provide the keyboard shortcut list if you want.
– Ramhound
Sep 1 '15 at 18:07
2
That's for Explorer specifically, not Windows in general. Of course, that's true of all keyboard shortcuts; programs can override anything except CTRL+ALT+DEL. Whether MS put it on that list or not, ALT+ENTER is a common shortcut for "toggle full screen", in fact a number of my games use it too (though I haven't tried them on Win10). That comes back to the actual question, which seems to be "Why does Win10 still show window chrome when a game tries to go full screen"? As you say, the game is processing the shortcut, so Win10 is displaying "full screen" mode differently for some reason.
– CBHacking
Sep 1 '15 at 18:18
1
I have observed the behaviour both in Battlefield 4 and Dragon Age 3 Inquisition
– Nilzor
Sep 1 '15 at 20:13