![]() lolĪNYWAY, it seems that having left that rogue space in place actually solved this irritating problem with Yosemite spaces for me. I could live with that until I wanted to eliminate it again. So I had two spaces with the same background. In this file exists an entry to enable/disable mission control. ![]() Being more lazy than normal one day, I decided to leave that rogue space alone on the 2nd monitor and not to delete it. I'd gotten into the habit of eliminating that particular space immediately after I'd finished dragging the others over. What I started noticing however was that the one background of the only space left on the 2nd monitor after a restart, was actually the same desktop picture of the 1st space on the 1st monitor. Once the system restarted I'd drag all of the 2nd monitor spaces back over to the 2nd monitor and I'd continue on until the next reboot. I also have several spaces on my second display for mail, Safari etc. I use a Cintiq as my primary display and have three different spaces for certain apps. Since using Mavericks, I have several spaces on each monitor. All my spaces have their own distinct desktop picture - which is the way I like it. Every time I restart my Macbook Pro Retina (Mid 2012), my spaces in mission control reset from my second monitor. My second monitor spaces would populate the 1st monitor spaces ad nauseum after every restart/shutdown using 10.10.3.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |