![]() ![]() You will need to change this line and add one for each monitor, similar to this: The example bspwmrc configures ten desktops on one monitor like this:īspc monitor -d I II III IV V VI VII VIII IX X See the bspwm(1) and sxhkd(1) manuals for detailed documentation. These two files are where you will be setting wm settings and keybindings, respectively. $ install -Dm644 /usr/share/doc/bspwm/examples/sxhkdrc ~/.config/sxhkd/sxhkdrc ![]() ![]() $ install -Dm755 /usr/share/doc/bspwm/examples/bspwmrc ~/.config/bspwm/bspwmrc The file bspwmrc needs to be executable since the default example is simply a shell script that in turn The example configuration is located in /usr/share/doc/bspwm/examples/.Ĭopy/install bspwmrc from there into ~/.config/bspwm/ and sxhkdrc into ~/.config/sxhkd/. ![]() I wonder if any what which one.Note: There have been no releases since 2020-08: if you encounter any issues or want missing features, choose the git packages. I am sure a lot of people have 2 monitors and there should be a solution to that, maybe another desktop environment rather than Cinnamon or another Lunix distro, rather than Mint, has a better support for several monitors setup. Items 2-3 make it absolutely unusable, the only hack I found to prevent this is to put the leftmost monitor to be logically at bottom, not at the left, but I think such a workarounds must not be necessary to work with a descent operating system There is no "sticky cursor" option that prevents mouse cursor to accidently leave current monitor - a useful feature that is available to windows users via 3rd party utility.Looks like Mint does not distinguish between primary/secondary monitor at all, because it just opens everything on the left, even code completion pop-ups in IDE! - that it absolutely insane.The same problem is noticed in windows as well but at least it remembers which monitor is set to primary and opens apps there, while Linux Mint just puts them onto the leftmost one.Apps do not remember which monitor they belong to, so after I put my device/monitors to sleep and then wake up - all applications are on the same monitor and I have to start my day by sorting them back.I have been using Linux Mint for a couple of years, and everything was fine until I decided to plug in second monitor, that's when I discovered a lot of severe problems that made me to start thinking about switching back to windows. ![]()
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