Multi-Monitor Color Rendering on Displays with Different Color Depths (281495)
The information in this article applies to:
- Microsoft Windows Millennium Edition
- Microsoft Windows 98 Second Edition
- Microsoft Windows 98
- Microsoft Windows 95
This article was previously published under Q281495
If this article does not describe your hardware-related issue, please see the following Microsoft Web site to view more articles about hardware: SYMPTOMS
If all of the following conditions exist, some of the desktop colors on the secondary display may be dithered, instead of solid, depending on the specific colors that you selected for the current scheme:
- Your computer is equipped with multiple monitors.
- Active Desktop is disabled.
- The secondary display is set to use fewer colors than the primary display.
NOTE: Dithering is a graphics technique that simulates a color by altering two or more colors in a pattern.
Note that some desktop elements, particularly window borders and control outlines, may appear to be corrupted when a window is dragged from the primary display to the secondary display.
CAUSE
This behavior can occur when the primary display is set to High Color (16 bit), or True Color (24 bit or 32 bit), and the secondary display is set to 256 colors.
RESOLUTION
To remove the color dithering, use one of the following methods:
- Configure both displays to use the same color depth.
- Select a different scheme.
- Select a different color that is solid. For more information about this, see the "More Information" section.
- Enable the Active Desktop "Show Web Content" feature in Windows Millennium Edition (Me), or the "View As Web Page" feature in Windows 95, Windows 98, or Windows 98 Second Edition.
NOTE: The following table lists the selections in the Item box of the Appearance tab of the Display Properties tool in Control Panel that the operating system allows to be dithered: |
Application Background | COLOR_APPWORKSPACE | Active Window Border | COLOR_ACTIVEBORDER | Desktop | COLOR_BACKGROUND, COLOR_DESKTOP | Inactive Window Border | COLOR_INACTIVEBORDER | Scrollbar | COLOR_SCROLLBAR | ToolTip | COLOR_INFOBK |
STATUS
This behavior is by design.
MORE INFORMATION
The behavior that is described in this article is a limitation of how display palettes can be realized across multiple displays.
A palette is a set of index values that identify the colors that can currently be drawn on a display that is capable of generating more colors than can be simultaneously shown. A display driver specifies its palette so the Windows Graphics Device Interface (GDI) can determine how different color indexes are to appear on the device. High and True color display settings are not generally palletized, but a 256 color display setting is.
Colors that are not solid on a 256-color display are those whose red green blue (RGB) values are not evenly divisible by 8. For example, the Desktop (background) color in the Windows Me Windows Standard scheme is RGB=58,110,165, which is not solid in the 256-color palette.
The operating system retains control of 20 colors, to provide VGA color functionality to programs that do not use palettes. The remaining 236 colors are available for general program use. A desktop scheme can yield dithered colors for some items when it is not possible to reconcile a non-solid color to the reserved colors on both displays.
For additional documentation about palette management, please view the "References" section of this article.
Note that if there is only one display and a non-solid color is selected, the Windows 95, Windows 98, and Windows 98 Second Edition desktop will dither the color, but Windows Me will not. Microsoft Windows 2000 has enhanced palette management that normalizes color mappings so that they remain solid on multiple displays.
The following tables list in detail how multiple displays can react to non-solid 256 color selections. In addition to dithering, the Appearance tab may render colors improperly under the following circumstances:
- The color scheme preview window and the color control may incorrectly show a color item as dithered.
- The color control may render the wrong color when the tool is dragged from display to display.
- Quitting and then restarting the Display tool fully reinitializes the Display tool, and can reduce any preview or display conflicts.
Legend:
Display Color Settings (Primary and Secondary display):
Colors - the Settings tab Color control selection
Value Headings:
Desktop - the Appearance tab Item control 'Desktop' selection
Preview - the sample desktop on the Appearance tab
Color - the Appearance tab Color control selection
Heading (suffixes):
Pri - the primary display (display 1)
2nd - the secondary display (display 2, and so on...)
Values
D = Dithered
S = Solid
E = Error (wrong color when tool is dragged to another display)
Windows Me|
256 | 256 | S | S | D | D | D | D | 256 | High/True | S | S | D | D | D | S | High/True | 256 | S | D | S | S | S | D, E | High/True | High/True | S | S | S | S | S | S |
Windows 98, Windows 98 Second Edition|
256 | 256 | D | D | S, E | S, E | D | D | 256 | High/True | D | S | D | D | D | S | High/True | 256 | S | D | S | S, E | S | D | High/True | High/True | S | S | S | S | S | S |
Note that this behavior can be easily demonstrated on a Windows Me-based computer that is using the Windows Standard scheme. The Windows Standard scheme includes colors that are not solid on a 256 color display.
REFERENCESFor additional information on Windows palette management, click the article number below
to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:
137372 SAMPLE: The Palette Manager: How and Why It Does What It Does
Modification Type: | Major | Last Reviewed: | 8/8/2006 |
---|
Keywords: | kbdisplay kbprb kbui KB281495 |
---|
|