Workspaces with Multiple Monitors #514
Replies: 3 comments 4 replies
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Check out these commands:
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I tried both of these in the whkdrc but nothing changed. Maybe I'm not declaring the workspaces correctly...? Idk. It would help a lot if there was a 'workspaces' section of the documentation which had all the relevant information in one place. |
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UPDATE. So apparently the problem was that wkhd.exe wasn't closing and restarting, even with alt+o, so the hotkeys weren't being updated. Powershell apparently doesn't recognize taskkill commands (kept getting messages like '/f not recognized' or 'wkhd.exe not found'). Had to ultimate use task manager to close and restart whkd, and then it works. I don't really understand powershell too well, so IDK if that's expected behaviour or not. Anyway, issue resolved. |
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I'm a little confused about how workspaces function, specifically with two monitors. Each monitor has its own set of workspaces, so there seems to be no easy way to switch with one shortcut to a workspace on the opposite monitor. It seems the only way to do this is to first switch focus over to the opposite monitor, and then press alt + [workspace number] to go to the workspace. This doesn't feel very good or efficient, especially compared to i3 on Linux where you can just directly press alt + [workspace number] and go to the correct monitor and workspace regardless where you are focused.
Is this intended design or am I not understanding how to use/setup workspaces?
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