Is your second monitor upside down? autolayout starts with 0 for the first session, and increments by the size toward the max -- regardless of whether it is horizontal or vertical. If the number of clients is 2, the screen is divided by 2 and the second window will be in the second position, which is bottom. The primary window still owns a slot, which would be the top.Originally Posted by 'Dragonshadow',index.php?page=Thread&postID=149422 #post149422
It is, in fact, possible. However, it's probably going to be 10ms or so slowerLax: What he's looking for is the ability to have X clients with X-1 thumbnails and never a "blank" spot on his desktop. When you hit a hotkey to bring a client into focus, it moves that client to the full sized reagon and puts the client that was the current focus back in it's slot. Basically with clients 1-5 all clients will always be in the same spot UNLESS a client other than 1 is the focus. If a client other than 1 is the focus, client 1 takes it's original location and client X fills the full screen. So if you start at client 1 and focus 2, they swap. If you then focus 3, client 1 moves to client 3's position, client 3 takes the full screen and client 2 moves back to it's original thumbnail position.WindowSnapper is not currently set up for this, it would have to have a position control script running in the uplink (main program). I can put it on my list of things to do today.
My personal preference is how it is -- the blank spot tells me exactly what session I am using without question, and I know exactly which windows are where at all times -- without the blank spot, it would take some extra thought to figure out which session is in which position and what hotkey to use to switch to it if I want. I'm not saying either way is right or wrong, just saying why I like this behavior![]()
Anyway, as stated, I will get that set up today
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