Shortcut to jump mouse cursor from one screen to another in Windows 10
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
I have two screens on my Windows 10 machine, and find it cumbersome to change the mouse cursor from one screen to another. The only way I know is to drag the mouse cursor from one screen to another, but that requires travelling some distance and going through the unblocked corner.
Is there a shortcut that would allow my mouse cursor to jump from one screen to another?
windows-10 keyboard-shortcuts mouse
New contributor
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
I have two screens on my Windows 10 machine, and find it cumbersome to change the mouse cursor from one screen to another. The only way I know is to drag the mouse cursor from one screen to another, but that requires travelling some distance and going through the unblocked corner.
Is there a shortcut that would allow my mouse cursor to jump from one screen to another?
windows-10 keyboard-shortcuts mouse
New contributor
1
Not natively, but there's software that can do it. Have you considered to increase the speed of your mouse, aka the sensitivity? I can do one swipe and move the cursor from the bottom left of my left monitor to the top right of my right monitor in a 3140x1200 desktop space. My hand moves about 10~15 cm on the mouse pad. By use of Mouse accelleration, I can move small distances by just moving the mouse slowly.
– LPChip
yesterday
Thanks @LPChip, increasing mouse speed helps, although there is still the barrier of passing through the right frontier corner.
– Arnaud Weil
yesterday
1
Possible duplicate of Windows keyboard shortcut to move mouse cursor between two screens
– Peter B
yesterday
1
@ArnaudWeil for corners, you may want to reposition your monitors in windows, to eliminate one of the two corners. That way you can stop it from snapping on at least one of the two corners. You will likely want to change the actual height of your monitors to correct for the shift too, but I never found a situation where this did not solve my problems, because its often only the top corner that is the problem, not the bottom.
– LPChip
yesterday
1
Honestly, I actually have a program on my pc that allows me to do what you ask (its not free though) but I never use it because it takes much more time to move my hands to the keyboard to press the buttons, than it is to just push my mouse with some force to get the cursor precisely where I want it to go. Don't forget, after you move the mouse to the other cursor, it will still require you to move the cursor some more, so you must grab the mouse again.
– LPChip
yesterday
|
show 3 more comments
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
up vote
1
down vote
favorite
I have two screens on my Windows 10 machine, and find it cumbersome to change the mouse cursor from one screen to another. The only way I know is to drag the mouse cursor from one screen to another, but that requires travelling some distance and going through the unblocked corner.
Is there a shortcut that would allow my mouse cursor to jump from one screen to another?
windows-10 keyboard-shortcuts mouse
New contributor
I have two screens on my Windows 10 machine, and find it cumbersome to change the mouse cursor from one screen to another. The only way I know is to drag the mouse cursor from one screen to another, but that requires travelling some distance and going through the unblocked corner.
Is there a shortcut that would allow my mouse cursor to jump from one screen to another?
windows-10 keyboard-shortcuts mouse
windows-10 keyboard-shortcuts mouse
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked yesterday
Arnaud Weil
1062
1062
New contributor
New contributor
1
Not natively, but there's software that can do it. Have you considered to increase the speed of your mouse, aka the sensitivity? I can do one swipe and move the cursor from the bottom left of my left monitor to the top right of my right monitor in a 3140x1200 desktop space. My hand moves about 10~15 cm on the mouse pad. By use of Mouse accelleration, I can move small distances by just moving the mouse slowly.
– LPChip
yesterday
Thanks @LPChip, increasing mouse speed helps, although there is still the barrier of passing through the right frontier corner.
– Arnaud Weil
yesterday
1
Possible duplicate of Windows keyboard shortcut to move mouse cursor between two screens
– Peter B
yesterday
1
@ArnaudWeil for corners, you may want to reposition your monitors in windows, to eliminate one of the two corners. That way you can stop it from snapping on at least one of the two corners. You will likely want to change the actual height of your monitors to correct for the shift too, but I never found a situation where this did not solve my problems, because its often only the top corner that is the problem, not the bottom.
– LPChip
yesterday
1
Honestly, I actually have a program on my pc that allows me to do what you ask (its not free though) but I never use it because it takes much more time to move my hands to the keyboard to press the buttons, than it is to just push my mouse with some force to get the cursor precisely where I want it to go. Don't forget, after you move the mouse to the other cursor, it will still require you to move the cursor some more, so you must grab the mouse again.
– LPChip
yesterday
|
show 3 more comments
1
Not natively, but there's software that can do it. Have you considered to increase the speed of your mouse, aka the sensitivity? I can do one swipe and move the cursor from the bottom left of my left monitor to the top right of my right monitor in a 3140x1200 desktop space. My hand moves about 10~15 cm on the mouse pad. By use of Mouse accelleration, I can move small distances by just moving the mouse slowly.
– LPChip
yesterday
Thanks @LPChip, increasing mouse speed helps, although there is still the barrier of passing through the right frontier corner.
– Arnaud Weil
yesterday
1
Possible duplicate of Windows keyboard shortcut to move mouse cursor between two screens
– Peter B
yesterday
1
@ArnaudWeil for corners, you may want to reposition your monitors in windows, to eliminate one of the two corners. That way you can stop it from snapping on at least one of the two corners. You will likely want to change the actual height of your monitors to correct for the shift too, but I never found a situation where this did not solve my problems, because its often only the top corner that is the problem, not the bottom.
– LPChip
yesterday
1
Honestly, I actually have a program on my pc that allows me to do what you ask (its not free though) but I never use it because it takes much more time to move my hands to the keyboard to press the buttons, than it is to just push my mouse with some force to get the cursor precisely where I want it to go. Don't forget, after you move the mouse to the other cursor, it will still require you to move the cursor some more, so you must grab the mouse again.
– LPChip
yesterday
1
1
Not natively, but there's software that can do it. Have you considered to increase the speed of your mouse, aka the sensitivity? I can do one swipe and move the cursor from the bottom left of my left monitor to the top right of my right monitor in a 3140x1200 desktop space. My hand moves about 10~15 cm on the mouse pad. By use of Mouse accelleration, I can move small distances by just moving the mouse slowly.
– LPChip
yesterday
Not natively, but there's software that can do it. Have you considered to increase the speed of your mouse, aka the sensitivity? I can do one swipe and move the cursor from the bottom left of my left monitor to the top right of my right monitor in a 3140x1200 desktop space. My hand moves about 10~15 cm on the mouse pad. By use of Mouse accelleration, I can move small distances by just moving the mouse slowly.
– LPChip
yesterday
Thanks @LPChip, increasing mouse speed helps, although there is still the barrier of passing through the right frontier corner.
– Arnaud Weil
yesterday
Thanks @LPChip, increasing mouse speed helps, although there is still the barrier of passing through the right frontier corner.
– Arnaud Weil
yesterday
1
1
Possible duplicate of Windows keyboard shortcut to move mouse cursor between two screens
– Peter B
yesterday
Possible duplicate of Windows keyboard shortcut to move mouse cursor between two screens
– Peter B
yesterday
1
1
@ArnaudWeil for corners, you may want to reposition your monitors in windows, to eliminate one of the two corners. That way you can stop it from snapping on at least one of the two corners. You will likely want to change the actual height of your monitors to correct for the shift too, but I never found a situation where this did not solve my problems, because its often only the top corner that is the problem, not the bottom.
– LPChip
yesterday
@ArnaudWeil for corners, you may want to reposition your monitors in windows, to eliminate one of the two corners. That way you can stop it from snapping on at least one of the two corners. You will likely want to change the actual height of your monitors to correct for the shift too, but I never found a situation where this did not solve my problems, because its often only the top corner that is the problem, not the bottom.
– LPChip
yesterday
1
1
Honestly, I actually have a program on my pc that allows me to do what you ask (its not free though) but I never use it because it takes much more time to move my hands to the keyboard to press the buttons, than it is to just push my mouse with some force to get the cursor precisely where I want it to go. Don't forget, after you move the mouse to the other cursor, it will still require you to move the cursor some more, so you must grab the mouse again.
– LPChip
yesterday
Honestly, I actually have a program on my pc that allows me to do what you ask (its not free though) but I never use it because it takes much more time to move my hands to the keyboard to press the buttons, than it is to just push my mouse with some force to get the cursor precisely where I want it to go. Don't forget, after you move the mouse to the other cursor, it will still require you to move the cursor some more, so you must grab the mouse again.
– LPChip
yesterday
|
show 3 more comments
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
Many sources can be found for Windows 10 shortcuts.
For example, Gizmodo's
The Ultimate Guide to Windows 10 Keyboard Shortcuts
that includes:
Windows Key+Shift+Left (or Right) — move a window to your next monitor.
If your problem is moving the mouse rather than a window,
you need a tool such as
AutoHotKey.
Here is a script (untested) that assumes your two monitors are
of the same size,
that uses Ctrl+Space for this:
^Space::
CoordMode, Mouse, Screen ; mouse coordinates relative to the screen
MouseGetPos, MouseX, MouseY
if (MouseX > A_ScreenWidth) {
MouseMove, -A_ScreenWidth, 0, 0, R
} else {
MouseMove, A_ScreenWidth, 0, 0, R
}
return
Thanks for the link, but I can't see a shortcut for moving the cursor to another screen.
– Arnaud Weil
yesterday
Is your problem just the mouse cursor and not moving a window?
– harrymc
yesterday
And are the monitors the same size?
– harrymc
yesterday
add a comment |
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
up vote
0
down vote
Many sources can be found for Windows 10 shortcuts.
For example, Gizmodo's
The Ultimate Guide to Windows 10 Keyboard Shortcuts
that includes:
Windows Key+Shift+Left (or Right) — move a window to your next monitor.
If your problem is moving the mouse rather than a window,
you need a tool such as
AutoHotKey.
Here is a script (untested) that assumes your two monitors are
of the same size,
that uses Ctrl+Space for this:
^Space::
CoordMode, Mouse, Screen ; mouse coordinates relative to the screen
MouseGetPos, MouseX, MouseY
if (MouseX > A_ScreenWidth) {
MouseMove, -A_ScreenWidth, 0, 0, R
} else {
MouseMove, A_ScreenWidth, 0, 0, R
}
return
Thanks for the link, but I can't see a shortcut for moving the cursor to another screen.
– Arnaud Weil
yesterday
Is your problem just the mouse cursor and not moving a window?
– harrymc
yesterday
And are the monitors the same size?
– harrymc
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
Many sources can be found for Windows 10 shortcuts.
For example, Gizmodo's
The Ultimate Guide to Windows 10 Keyboard Shortcuts
that includes:
Windows Key+Shift+Left (or Right) — move a window to your next monitor.
If your problem is moving the mouse rather than a window,
you need a tool such as
AutoHotKey.
Here is a script (untested) that assumes your two monitors are
of the same size,
that uses Ctrl+Space for this:
^Space::
CoordMode, Mouse, Screen ; mouse coordinates relative to the screen
MouseGetPos, MouseX, MouseY
if (MouseX > A_ScreenWidth) {
MouseMove, -A_ScreenWidth, 0, 0, R
} else {
MouseMove, A_ScreenWidth, 0, 0, R
}
return
Thanks for the link, but I can't see a shortcut for moving the cursor to another screen.
– Arnaud Weil
yesterday
Is your problem just the mouse cursor and not moving a window?
– harrymc
yesterday
And are the monitors the same size?
– harrymc
yesterday
add a comment |
up vote
0
down vote
up vote
0
down vote
Many sources can be found for Windows 10 shortcuts.
For example, Gizmodo's
The Ultimate Guide to Windows 10 Keyboard Shortcuts
that includes:
Windows Key+Shift+Left (or Right) — move a window to your next monitor.
If your problem is moving the mouse rather than a window,
you need a tool such as
AutoHotKey.
Here is a script (untested) that assumes your two monitors are
of the same size,
that uses Ctrl+Space for this:
^Space::
CoordMode, Mouse, Screen ; mouse coordinates relative to the screen
MouseGetPos, MouseX, MouseY
if (MouseX > A_ScreenWidth) {
MouseMove, -A_ScreenWidth, 0, 0, R
} else {
MouseMove, A_ScreenWidth, 0, 0, R
}
return
Many sources can be found for Windows 10 shortcuts.
For example, Gizmodo's
The Ultimate Guide to Windows 10 Keyboard Shortcuts
that includes:
Windows Key+Shift+Left (or Right) — move a window to your next monitor.
If your problem is moving the mouse rather than a window,
you need a tool such as
AutoHotKey.
Here is a script (untested) that assumes your two monitors are
of the same size,
that uses Ctrl+Space for this:
^Space::
CoordMode, Mouse, Screen ; mouse coordinates relative to the screen
MouseGetPos, MouseX, MouseY
if (MouseX > A_ScreenWidth) {
MouseMove, -A_ScreenWidth, 0, 0, R
} else {
MouseMove, A_ScreenWidth, 0, 0, R
}
return
edited yesterday
answered yesterday
harrymc
247k10254542
247k10254542
Thanks for the link, but I can't see a shortcut for moving the cursor to another screen.
– Arnaud Weil
yesterday
Is your problem just the mouse cursor and not moving a window?
– harrymc
yesterday
And are the monitors the same size?
– harrymc
yesterday
add a comment |
Thanks for the link, but I can't see a shortcut for moving the cursor to another screen.
– Arnaud Weil
yesterday
Is your problem just the mouse cursor and not moving a window?
– harrymc
yesterday
And are the monitors the same size?
– harrymc
yesterday
Thanks for the link, but I can't see a shortcut for moving the cursor to another screen.
– Arnaud Weil
yesterday
Thanks for the link, but I can't see a shortcut for moving the cursor to another screen.
– Arnaud Weil
yesterday
Is your problem just the mouse cursor and not moving a window?
– harrymc
yesterday
Is your problem just the mouse cursor and not moving a window?
– harrymc
yesterday
And are the monitors the same size?
– harrymc
yesterday
And are the monitors the same size?
– harrymc
yesterday
add a comment |
Arnaud Weil is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Arnaud Weil is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Arnaud Weil is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Arnaud Weil is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f1374974%2fshortcut-to-jump-mouse-cursor-from-one-screen-to-another-in-windows-10%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
1
Not natively, but there's software that can do it. Have you considered to increase the speed of your mouse, aka the sensitivity? I can do one swipe and move the cursor from the bottom left of my left monitor to the top right of my right monitor in a 3140x1200 desktop space. My hand moves about 10~15 cm on the mouse pad. By use of Mouse accelleration, I can move small distances by just moving the mouse slowly.
– LPChip
yesterday
Thanks @LPChip, increasing mouse speed helps, although there is still the barrier of passing through the right frontier corner.
– Arnaud Weil
yesterday
1
Possible duplicate of Windows keyboard shortcut to move mouse cursor between two screens
– Peter B
yesterday
1
@ArnaudWeil for corners, you may want to reposition your monitors in windows, to eliminate one of the two corners. That way you can stop it from snapping on at least one of the two corners. You will likely want to change the actual height of your monitors to correct for the shift too, but I never found a situation where this did not solve my problems, because its often only the top corner that is the problem, not the bottom.
– LPChip
yesterday
1
Honestly, I actually have a program on my pc that allows me to do what you ask (its not free though) but I never use it because it takes much more time to move my hands to the keyboard to press the buttons, than it is to just push my mouse with some force to get the cursor precisely where I want it to go. Don't forget, after you move the mouse to the other cursor, it will still require you to move the cursor some more, so you must grab the mouse again.
– LPChip
yesterday