![]() How it works: I create a bitmap that conceptually covers the whole desktop space, as the user sees it. I understand that, I wrote a little program using that knowledge, and it works beautifully in Windows 7. The core concepts is that Windows places the top-left corner of the provided bitmap at the top-left corner of the primary monitor, and wraps around to fill any desktop space to the left and/or above that. ![]() Raymond Chen has an article "How do I put a different wallpaper on each monitor?" ( ), also quoted in Monitors position on Windows wallpaper. There are a number of questions and answers about setting wallpapers programmatically on multi-monitor setups in Windows, but I'm asking specifically for Windows 10 (and maybe Windows 8) because it seems to work differently from all the explanations I found.
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