In this video, I show you how to map the surface of a graphics tablet to a single monitor or display on Linux.
By default, absolute positioned devices such as graphics tablets (including my Wacom tablet) are mapped from the input area of the tablet to the full resolution of the X11 display. On modern systems, all of your physical monitors are part of the same X11 output, so the area of the tablet is split over all screens.
See my page on this subject for the exact commands!
https://wiki.tonytascioglu.com/index....
To use a graphics tablet as we normally would, we need to limit the tablets input area to a single monitor. This can be done easily in 2 ways as shows in the video, either using xinput or xsetwacom if you have the Wacom utilities installed. They both do the same thing.
The commands used in the video are on my website at https://wiki.tonytascioglu.com under the Linux Scripts section.
This video is available under a CC-BY-NC-SA license on Peertube.
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Produced by Tony Tascioglu
https://tonytascioglu.com
Watch video How to Map a Wacom Tablet to a Single Monitor on Linux online without registration, duration hours minute second in high quality. This video was added by user Tony Tascioglu (TechnoTony) 19 February 2021, don't forget to share it with your friends and acquaintances, it has been viewed on our site 7,429 once and liked it 300 people.