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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T07:43:11+00:00 2026-05-13T07:43:11+00:00

A snippet from my Java application: JFrame f = new JFrame(); GraphicsEnvironment ge =

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A snippet from my Java application:

 JFrame f = new JFrame();
 GraphicsEnvironment ge = GraphicsEnvironment.getLocalGraphicsEnvironment();
 GraphicsDevice gd = ge.getDefaultScreenDevice();
 gd.setFullScreenWindow(f);

So what it does is make it self fullscreen. Now the odd thing is that the program is fullscreen but only on one monitor!
E.g. I have a windows vista system with two screens that are combined in one desktop.
What to do automatically let it go fullscreen over all monitors?


Ok I tried that:

import java.awt.image.ColorModel;
import java.awt.GraphicsConfiguration;
import java.awt.GraphicsDevice;
import java.awt.GraphicsEnvironment;
import java.awt.Rectangle;

class grdevs
{
    public static void main(String [] args)
    {
        GraphicsEnvironment ge = GraphicsEnvironment.getLocalGraphicsEnvironment();
        GraphicsDevice[] gs = ge.getScreenDevices();
        for(GraphicsDevice curGs : gs)
        {
            GraphicsConfiguration[] gc = curGs.getConfigurations();
            for(GraphicsConfiguration curGc : gc)
            {
                Rectangle bounds = curGc.getBounds();
                ColorModel cm = curGc.getColorModel();

                System.out.println("" + bounds.getX() + "," + bounds.getY() + " " + bounds.getWidth() + "x" + bounds.getHeight() + " " + cm);
            }
        } 
    }
}

but it gives:

0.0,0.0 1024.0x768.0 DirectColorModel: rmask=ff0000 gmask=ff00 bmask=ff amask=0
0.0,0.0 1024.0x768.0 DirectColorModel: rmask=ff0000 gmask=ff00 bmask=ff amask=0
0.0,0.0 1024.0x768.0 DirectColorModel: rmask=ff0000 gmask=ff00 bmask=ff amask=0
0.0,0.0 1024.0x768.0 DirectColorModel: rmask=ff0000 gmask=ff00 bmask=ff amask=0
0.0,0.0 1024.0x768.0 DirectColorModel: rmask=ff0000 gmask=ff00 bmask=ff amask=0
0.0,0.0 1024.0x768.0 DirectColorModel: rmask=ff0000 gmask=ff00 bmask=ff amask=0
1024.0,0.0 1024.0x768.0 DirectColorModel: rmask=ff0000 gmask=ff00 bmask=ff amask=0
1024.0,0.0 1024.0x768.0 DirectColorModel: rmask=ff0000 gmask=ff00 bmask=ff amask=0
1024.0,0.0 1024.0x768.0 DirectColorModel: rmask=ff0000 gmask=ff00 bmask=ff amask=0
1024.0,0.0 1024.0x768.0 DirectColorModel: rmask=ff0000 gmask=ff00 bmask=ff amask=0
1024.0,0.0 1024.0x768.0 DirectColorModel: rmask=ff0000 gmask=ff00 bmask=ff amask=0
1024.0,0.0 1024.0x768.0 DirectColorModel: rmask=ff0000 gmask=ff00 bmask=ff amask=0

E.g I would expect a device capable of 2048×768 as they are combined in one (I clicked on “extend desktop”).

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T07:43:11+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 7:43 am

    You could try:

    int width = 0;
    int height = 0;
    GraphicsEnvironment ge = GraphicsEnvironment.getLocalGraphicsEnvironment();
    GraphicsDevice[] gs = ge.getScreenDevices();
    for (GraphicsDevice curGs : gs)
    {
      DisplayMode mode = curGs.getDisplayMode();
      width += mode.getWidth();
      height = mode.getHeight();
    }
    

    This should calculate the total width of multiple screens. Obviously it only supports horizontally aligned screens in the form above – you’d have to analyse the bounds of the graphics configurations to handle other monitor alignments (depends how bulletproof you want to make it).

    Edit: And then set the size of your frame: f.setSize(width, height);

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