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Table Of Contents
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Use Full Screen Mode in Player on page 60
In full screen mode, the virtual machine display fills the screen, so that you cannot see the borders of
the Player window.
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Use Unity Mode on page 60
You can switch virtual machines that have Linux or Windows 2000 or later guest operating systems to
Unity mode to display applications directly on the host system desktop.
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Use Multiple Monitors for One Virtual Machine in Player on page 63
If the host system has multiple monitors, you can configure a virtual machine to use multiple
monitors. You can use the multiple-monitor feature when the virtual machine is in full screen mode.
Configure Display Settings for a Virtual Machine
You can specify monitor resolution settings, configure multiple monitors, and select accelerated graphics
capabilities for a virtual machine. You can use the multiple-monitor feature when the virtual machine is in
full screen mode.
To use DirectX 9 accelerated graphics, the guest operating system must be Windows XP, Windows Vista, or
Windows 7.
Only Player 3.x and later virtual machines support specifying resolution settings and setting the number of
monitors that the guest operating system can use.
Prerequisites
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Verify that the latest version of VMware Tools is installed in the guest operating system.
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Verify that the guest operating system in the virtual machine is Windows XP, Windows Vista,
Windows 7, or Linux.
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If you plan to use DirectX 9 accelerated graphics, prepare the host system. See “Prepare the Host
System to Use DirectX 9 Accelerated Graphics,” on page 68.
Procedure
1 Select the virtual machine and select Player > Manage > Virtual Machine Settings.
2 On the Hardware tab, select Display.
3 Specify whether host settings determine the number of monitors.
Option Description
Use host setting for monitors
When you select this setting, the SVGA driver uses two monitors, a
maximum bounding box width of 3840, and a maximum bounding box
height of 1920. The virtual machine is configured to have a minimum of
two 1920x1200 monitors, in a side-by-side topology, in both normal and
rotated orientations. If the host system has more than two monitors, the
virtual machine uses the number of monitors on the host system instead. If
the host system's bounding box is wider or taller than the defaults, the
virtual machine uses the larger size. You should select this setting in most
cases.
Specify monitor settings
Set the number of monitors that the virtual machine will see, regardless of
the number of monitors on the host system. This setting is useful if you use
a multimonitor host system and you need to test in a virtual machine that
has only one monitor. It is also useful if you are developing a multimonitor
application in a virtual machine and the host system has only one monitor.
After you power on the virtual machine, the guest operating system sees
the number of monitors that you specified. Select a resolution from the list
or type a setting that has the format width x height, where width and height
are the number of pixels.
Chapter 4 Using Virtual Machines
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