Hi --

Windows XP?!

You have several choices when setting up multiple monitors.  If both
monitors are the same physical size and support the same resolution (say,
1680 x 1050), Windows allows them to be seen as a single monitor (3360 x
1050).  In my experience, this works best when the two monitors are
identical and run off the same graphics card.  Since most applications are
written with the expectation that they will be displayed on a monitor that
is roughly 4x3 or 3x2 in pixels, you may not get what you hope for with this
setup.

If the monitors have different physical size or are the same physical size
but do not support the same resolution or you simply want two separate areas
of monitor real estate, then set them up as two monitors -- one is the
Windows primary monitor, the other an Extension.  This is the more typical
setup.  You can drag any application  from its original location on the
primary monitor to the extension.  So you can have the AmiBroker chart on
your primary monitor and the afl editor on the extension, for example.

Howard
www.quantitativetradingsystems.com


On 4/29/07, itmwh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

  I learned from past post that you can spread one instance of AB across
two LCD screens and open many charts in it. I tried to this without
success, the charts are not properly displayed, since one of my LCD is
17" and the other is 15", I wonder if it is the different LCD size that
cause the problem.

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