NVIDIA Corporation 39Chapter 4Using nView Multi-Display SettingsAvailable settings include:• Color Correction. See “Adjusting Desktop Colors” on page 93.• Device Adjustments. See “Configuring Displays” on page 62.• Select TV format. See “Adjusting Television (TV) Settings” on page 67.• NVRotate. See “Using NVRotate Settings” on page 131.• Change Resolution. See “Enabling Virtual Desktop — Clone Mode” on page 55and “Changing Screen Resolutions and Refresh Rates” on page 136.Note: You can access these same menu options by clicking the Device Settings >>option at the bottom of the nView Display Settings page.About Display NumberingWhen you are running in nView Single display, Clone, or Dualview mode, thenumeric part of the display image identifier such as 1 (or 2), 1 and 2, 1a and 1b, or 2aand 2b reflect the Windows display number, as viewable from the Windows DisplayProperties page.Note: The Windows operating system only assigns numbers to displays running innative Windows multi‐display mode — i.e., Dualview, which is common toboth Windows and NVIDIA — but not Clone mode, which is an NVIDIAnView‐specific display mode.nView Dualview mode. The display images on the nView Display Settings page arenumbered as separate displays, 1 and 2, as in the Windows Display Properties page.nView Clone or Span mode. Multiple displays running in nView Clone or nViewSpan mode also appear as one “Dualview” head to Windows and therefore theWindows Display Properties page displays only a single display image. The displayimages on the nView Display Settings, however, may be numbered as 1a and 1b (or2a and 2b) where the numeric value remains the same with only the alphabetic partof the number (a or b) designating separate heads indicating dual display.About Renaming DisplaysIn this release of the NVIDIA driver, you can also “rename” the display names thatappear on your desktop context menu shown in Figure 3.2 of the previous chapter.On your nView Display Settings page, these display names are also always visible in