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My Lenovo Yoga 7i laptop starts in Tablet Mode by default, so I end up with large desktop/taskbar icons and other unpleasant UI artifacts.

This can be fixed by installing and running Lenovo Yoga Mode Control for Windows, a proprietarily Lenovo service (YMC.EXE), infamous by its aggressive CPU usage.

In my case, YMC is set to Manual in Windows Service Manager. To get Windows back into Desktop mode, I have to manually start and stop YMC from an admin console: net start ymc && net stop ymc upon every system restart.

I'm looking for a programming way of doing whatever YMC is doing to switch Windows 11 to Desktop mode., to wrap it as a small utility app.

The only related answer I've found so far is this one, mentioning the undocumented ITabletModeController:

var pSP = (IServiceProvider)Activator.CreateInstance(Type.GetTypeFromCLSID(CLSID_ImmersiveShell));
var pTMC = (ITabletModeController)pSP.QueryService(typeof(ITabletModeController).GUID, typeof(ITabletModeController).GUID);
if (pTMC != null)
{
    // 0 = Desktop, 1 = Tablet
    int nMode = 0;
    int nRet = pTMC.GetMode(ref nMode);
    nRet = pTMC.SetMode(nMode==0?1:0, 4);
}

I tried it to no avail. ChatGPT hasn't been helpful, either :)

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2 Answers 2

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Using the answer above, I did the procedure below:

First, open Notepad from the start menu and paste the below code:

# Define the registry path and value
$registryPath = "HKLM:\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\PriorityControl"
$registryName = "ConvertibleSlateMode"

# Check if the registry path exists
if (Test-Path $registryPath) {
    # Get the current value of the registry key
    $currentValue = Get-ItemProperty -Path $registryPath | Select-Object -ExpandProperty $registryName
    
    # Check the current value and set the new value accordingly
    if ($currentValue -eq 0) {
        $newValue = 1
    }
    elseif ($currentValue -eq 1) {
        $newValue = 0
    }
    else {
        Write-Host "Invalid value detected: $currentValue"
        exit
    }

    # Set the registry value
    Set-ItemProperty -Path $registryPath -Name $registryName -Value $newValue -Type DWORD -Force
    Write-Host "Registry key '$registryName' set to $newValue successfully."
} else {
    Write-Host "Registry path '$registryPath' does not exist."
}

Save the file somewhere with the filename as tablet_mode.ps1 (Hint: Change "Save as type" to All Files). After saving, right-click on the file and click "Copy as Path". Right-click on any empty space on your desktop and create a new shortcut. For the location of the shortcut, enter the below:

powershell.exe -Command "& {$wd = Get-Location; Start-Process powershell.exe -Verb RunAs -ArgumentList \"-ExecutionPolicy ByPass -Command Set-Location $wd; path_to_file\tablet_mode.ps1\"}"

Replace "path_to_file\tablet_mode.ps1" with the actual file path copied above. E.g. C:\users\dummyuser\desktop\tablet.mode.ps1. Click on next, give the shortcut a name, and save. Now you can double-click on that shortcut anytime to switch from desktop to tablet mode and vice-versa.

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+500

Okay so I am posting this as an answer because I think it would be too much for a comment. If it doesn't relate to the question please comment so I can delete it. I do not have a Lenovo Yoga 7i but my Acer Travelmate Spin also has a tablet mode.

As per GetSystemMetrics GetSystemMetrics(SM_CONVERTIBLESLATEMODE); // 0x2003 we seem to be able to read if we are in slate mode 0 or 1 where slate 0 = tablet and slate 1 = laptop or other devices according to convertibleslatemode.

The docs claim that:

Reflects the state of the laptop or slate mode, 0 for Slate Mode and non-zero otherwise. When this system metric changes, the system sends a broadcast message via WM_SETTINGCHANGE with "ConvertibleSlateMode" in the LPARAM. Note that this system metric doesn't apply to desktop PCs. In that case, use GetAutoRotationState.

I tried to do this broadcast myself via:

DWORD_PTR res;
SendMessageTimeout(HWND_BROADCAST, WM_SETTINGCHANGE, 0, (LPARAM) L"ConvertibleSlateMode", SMTO_ABORTIFHUNG, 1000, &res);

Which did not work.

I then realised that there was a regkey at: Computer\HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\CurrentControlSet\Control\PriorityControl called ConvertibleSlateMode which reflected the values mentioned before of slate 0 and 1.

If you are in tablet mode (slate 0) and set the value of the regkey to 1 it enters desktop mode. I am unsure if the broadcast (mentioned above) is required or not but for me it worked to (while in tablet mode) set the regkey to 0 and then to 1.

In c++ this can be done with:

void setRegKey(const DWORD value) {
    HKEY hKey;
    LONG regStatus = RegOpenKeyExW(HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE, L"SYSTEM\\CurrentControlSet\\Control\\PriorityControl", 0, KEY_SET_VALUE, &hKey);

    if (regStatus != ERROR_SUCCESS) {
        std::cout << "Error opening registry key.\n";
        return;
    }

    const wchar_t* valueName = L"ConvertibleSlateMode";


    regStatus = RegSetValueExW(hKey, valueName, 0, REG_DWORD, (BYTE*)&value, sizeof(DWORD));

    if (regStatus != ERROR_SUCCESS) {
        std::cout << "Error setting registry value.\n";
        RegCloseKey(hKey);
        return;
    }

    RegCloseKey(hKey);

    std::cout << "Registry value set successfully.\n";
}

and then in main:

int main() {
    setRegKey(0);
    setRegKey(1);
}

EDIT: As mentioned by @BenVoigt and @KeshavV. you can most likely also follow this: Windows 10 tablet mode Registry setting: 'When this device automatically switches tablet mode on or off'

More related links:
GetSystemMetrics
WM_SETTINGCHANGE
SendMessageTimeout
convertibleslatemode

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  • 1
    And possibly all he needs is to set the SigninMode registry key: stackoverflow.com/q/35187260/103167
    – Ben Voigt
    Commented Apr 6, 2023 at 17:55
  • 1
    @darclander thanks for the research! I'll try it out and report back here.
    – noseratio
    Commented Apr 8, 2023 at 2:01
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    @darclander this didn't do anything on my Lenovo Yoga (same as the linked answer). Lenovo must be using some propriety hardware protocol via their YMC.exe. I'll reward the bounty to your answer anyway for the research unless someone posts a better solution - thank you!
    – noseratio
    Commented Apr 10, 2023 at 22:35
  • 1
    @noseratio that is unfortunate. Did you also try to manually write the 0 --> 1 in regedit? (that's the first thing which worked for me) I am pretty sure the broadcast can do something but I am sadly not experienced enough with that to provide a good answer. I will keep looking!
    – darclander
    Commented Apr 11, 2023 at 11:23
  • 1
    @darclander yep I've tried that with a quick PowerShell script that ChatGPT generated for me :) Thanks for your help anyway, a well deserved bounty!
    – noseratio
    Commented Apr 11, 2023 at 21:59

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