JJ <
[email protected]> wrote:
When the taskbar is at the bottom of the screen and the mouse cursor
is moved to the very bottom of the screen (so that the cursor only
shows 1 pixel), if we click the mouse, the cursor will be pushed back
several pixels up away from the screen edge.
If the taskbar is at left, then it's when the cursor is at the left
edge of the screen, and it'll be pushed back several pixels to the
right. Same thing if the taskbar is at the top or the right.
This doesn't happen if the mouse cursor is at the other 3 screen
edges where the taskbar doesn't stick on. And this only applies in
Windows 2000 up to Windows XP.
The question is, why does it do that? Anyone know?
Under Mouse Properties for Pointers, are you using a Windows default
scheme for pointers? Or some 3rd party pointer scheme? Are you using
the mouse driver included in Windows, or did you install ancilliary
software that came with the mouse? Whose device driver is the mouse
using? Which brand and model of mouse are you using?
Is the Taskbar always shown, or did you configure it to auto-hide?
If using a Windows scheme, the pointer points up and to the left
(northwesterly pointer). In that case, you cannot move the tip of the
point beyond the screen at the left and top screen edges. The mouse
stops moving when its tip hits those screen edges. However, you can
make the mouse pointer disappear off the screen when you move it to the
bottom or right edges. The "handle" part of the mouse pointer goes
offscreen, and only a tiny edge of the left side of the pointer can be
seen when it is moved off the right edge, and you may not see the very
tip of the pointer when moved to the bottom edge.
If you drag the mouse pointer starting inside a window with text (so you
start by selecting text but drag the cursor outside that text window),
the default drag icon is an I-bar, and you can partially see it on edge
screen edge.
Are you using a screen resolution that matches the native resolution of
the monitor?
Have you tried uninstalling the video driver/software for your
unidentified video card, and revert to the standard/embedded driver in
Windows to test mouse pointer behavior?
Are you using a scaling feature in the video software that enlarges the
logical screen greater than the monitor's physical screen size? That
is, does the Windows screen slide around when the cursor hits a monitor
screen edge?
Since you are asking about really old OSes, are you using a CRT or LCD
monitor?
Are you using a 3rd party desktop manager instead of explorer.exe?
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