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I would like to have my monitors controlled from Windows (simple stuff such as changing the input source), but cannot find a way of sending DDC/CI commands from Python...

Any clue about a library or method that could help here?

ThiefMaster
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ronszon
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2 Answers2

14

This is easily possible using the windows monitor API. I don't think there are any Python bindings out there and pywin32 doesn't contain those functions. However, using ctypes to call them is not that hard.

Here's an example that switches the monitor to soft-off and then back on; it should be pretty easy to adapt it to changing the input source etc. The only complicated part is getting the handles for the physical monitors after all:

from ctypes import windll, byref, Structure, WinError, POINTER, WINFUNCTYPE
from ctypes.wintypes import BOOL, HMONITOR, HDC, RECT, LPARAM, DWORD, BYTE, WCHAR, HANDLE


_MONITORENUMPROC = WINFUNCTYPE(BOOL, HMONITOR, HDC, POINTER(RECT), LPARAM)


class _PHYSICAL_MONITOR(Structure):
    _fields_ = [('handle', HANDLE),
                ('description', WCHAR * 128)]


def _iter_physical_monitors(close_handles=True):
    """Iterates physical monitors.

    The handles are closed automatically whenever the iterator is advanced.
    This means that the iterator should always be fully exhausted!

    If you want to keep handles e.g. because you need to store all of them and
    use them later, set `close_handles` to False and close them manually."""

    def callback(hmonitor, hdc, lprect, lparam):
        monitors.append(HMONITOR(hmonitor))
        return True

    monitors = []
    if not windll.user32.EnumDisplayMonitors(None, None, _MONITORENUMPROC(callback), None):
        raise WinError('EnumDisplayMonitors failed')

    for monitor in monitors:
        # Get physical monitor count
        count = DWORD()
        if not windll.dxva2.GetNumberOfPhysicalMonitorsFromHMONITOR(monitor, byref(count)):
            raise WinError()
        # Get physical monitor handles
        physical_array = (_PHYSICAL_MONITOR * count.value)()
        if not windll.dxva2.GetPhysicalMonitorsFromHMONITOR(monitor, count.value, physical_array):
            raise WinError()
        for physical in physical_array:
            yield physical.handle
            if close_handles:
                if not windll.dxva2.DestroyPhysicalMonitor(physical.handle):
                    raise WinError()


def set_vcp_feature(monitor, code, value):
    """Sends a DDC command to the specified monitor.

    See this link for a list of commands:
    ftp://ftp.cis.nctu.edu.tw/pub/csie/Software/X11/private/VeSaSpEcS/VESA_Document_Center_Monitor_Interface/mccsV3.pdf
    """
    if not windll.dxva2.SetVCPFeature(HANDLE(monitor), BYTE(code), DWORD(value)):
        raise WinError()


# Switch to SOFT-OFF, wait for the user to press return and then back to ON
for handle in _iter_physical_monitors():
    set_vcp_feature(handle, 0xd6, 0x04)
    raw_input()
    set_vcp_feature(handle, 0xd6, 0x01)
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ThiefMaster
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  • Excellent! That works nicely, only if my philips monitor would support the 0x60 command with displaylink input :/ – ronszon Feb 06 '15 at 12:03
  • Although very interesting I don't think many people would prefer to deal with this sort of advanced code. Have a look at the package I found in my answer below. – Michał Wesołowski Nov 29 '22 at 08:34
4

It's your lucky day, you don't have to deal with those ctypes anymore. Somebody actually made a python package that does this for you and exposes a simple api. It's called monitorcontrol.

Here's a quick example of setting luminance on all monitors:

from monitorcontrol import get_monitors

for monitor in get_monitors():
    with monitor:
        monitor.set_luminance(50)