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892 points todsacerdoti | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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_davide_ ◴[] No.45289173[source]
I have been using kde for 15+ years, except 4.0, which was painful, everything has been mostly a smooth experience.

> However, KDE considered my TV the primary desktop and put the task bar only in that monitor, and even disabling the TV didn't add the task bar to my monitor.

You can order the screens however you want; the first one will be considered primary.

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kokada ◴[] No.45289217[source]
Yes, but I assumed that disabling the TV would set the monitor as the primary desktop and added the taskbar to it, but it didn't. Now I may have done something wrong, but I was just reporting my experience.
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bombela ◴[] No.45290707[source]
If unplugging the display cable works though. It's most likely the TV pretending to be still on.

I have a LG TV C1 that behaves like that. While my computer monitors do not have this issue.

The TV even has a dual personality. It doesn't appear to report the same informations via EBID when powered off vs powered on.

I also have a MS Windows 10 connected to this same TV, and if I make the mistake of powering up or wake from sleep Windows before turning on the TV, then the NVIDIA GPU setup some broken resolution. And only a reboot fixes it.

So my guess is it's the TV presenting itself with different EBID when off vs powered on. And also somehow presenting itself as active on the HDMI line no matter if off or on. Changing the TV inputs also doesn't tell KDE that the display was turned off.

I haven't debugged any of it. These are just my observations.

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kokada ◴[] No.45291158[source]
Author here: I didn't unplug the display, I went to the settings and disabled the TV. I am not saying that I didn't do anything wrong, but I expected that disabling the TV would make the monitor the primary display and move the taskbar to it.
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1. bombela ◴[] No.45302088{3}[source]
This is most likely a bug in KDE indeed. I misunderstood disabled in the setting with powering off.