0

Changing the coordinate mode from absolute positioning to relative is quite common in all graphic tablets. And even my huion h610 pro had this option on a mac. But I moved to windows and it doesn't seem to have this option in Windows.

A lot of users have been encountering this issue online and not a lot of answers - albeit one was told that the option is not available on windows by a Huion rep. I find it hard to believe since that option is available even on linux and is intrinsic to how a graphic tablet works. Hopefully, someone who managed to find an answer can help avoid sending the tablet back.

Also, personally I think the tablet is fine , its just a case of finding the right drivers to work with windows 7 since I found the relative/absolute mouse positioning to be working fine in my macbook but not on my windows 7.

2
  • was hoping the design people might have found a way around this as they use huion tablets daily and since no one on the internet, not even huion themselves, seem to have a clue.
    – masterpiece
    Mar 19, 2015 at 18:39
  • but this is more a design related question than it is IT? IT people dont use graphic tablets.
    – masterpiece
    Mar 19, 2015 at 18:41

1 Answer 1

2

I'm intrigued by the question, because I also own the Huion H610Pro. (and I didn't know about the relative/absolute behavior!) [Windows 8.1 x64] I looked around the Net, and found nothing too. But I found your question in DeviantArt too (Creativ9? :')

Try this:

  1. Close the tablet driver (its icon in the systemtray: rightclick> EXIT)
  2. Go to C:\Program Files\TabletDriver. That's Huion's driver location.
  3. Back up tabletconfig.ini
  4. Open tabletconfig.ini with your text editing program (Notepad, etc.)
  5. See line "SimlateMouse=1"
  6. Change 1 to 0 (zero).
  7. Save it! =')
  8. If you can't save it, Google how to unlock system files so you can edit and save it :')
  9. Unlock it... open, edit,.... then save it! =')

Some beautiful screenshots:

Config file, with "SimlateMouse" line

//

"Simulate Mouse" is checked, but greyed out

Now, check if the behavior has changed =')

"Simulate Mouse" is now unchecked!

ADD: make a shortcut link of that config file in your desktop or what's convenient for you. Tadaaa =')

5
  • It didnt work for me. See the problem is that if the .ini file has SimulateMouse = 0, and then when I open TabletDriver, its SimulateMouse setting gets changed to unchecked, ie 0, and the pen can not move the mouse on the screen at all. When I check it again, then the pen can move the cursor on the screen. Mar 19, 2015 at 20:22
  • Also my GUI is different to yours and I downloaded the drivers from huion website today. i.imgur.com/WdcMuf6.png Notice the option to check/uncheck SimulateMouse. When I uncheck it, pen cant move cursor on screen at all, and changing ini to 0 has that effect. Ini atumatically uncheck the SimulateMouse in GUI next time I restart TabletDriver if ini has setting set to 0. Mar 19, 2015 at 20:22
  • :'/ Sorry. I couldn't check it on my side first. My Huion is in the office. Sorry I wasn't able to help too. Now I don't know if I should delete my answer or keep it here as a wrong answer. Mar 19, 2015 at 22:34
  • its not a wrong answer and I am grateful. But our softwares/drivers/GUI seem different so this answer may be useful to someone else. In fact, I dont understand why your gui is different to mine when we both have same model and downloaded from their website. Mar 19, 2015 at 22:38
  • Thanks man, I appreciate that =') Well, I do hope it helps someone else. I'll try it also on mine. --Maybe the GUI is different depending on the system? I have WIndows 8.1 (pre-installed), so that may be why. Huion isn't very good at drivers and driver updates (based on what I've read in the Internet :'o) so the drivers are different depending on the Windows OS. Mar 20, 2015 at 8:29

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .