I agree lxrandr lacks flexibility, but when I looked at their official pages, I think that is by design. I would say installing arandr or learning xrandr should be the suggested remedies for users needing to go beyond lxrandr.
Sent from my Windows Phone ________________________________ From: Israel<mailto:[email protected]> Sent: 3/13/2014 9:33 AM To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> Subject: Re: Dual display, non-mirrored On 03/13/2014 02:11 AM, Lars Noodén wrote: > On 03/12/2014 11:17 PM, [email protected] wrote:> I think you > have to install arandr as a graphical frontend. Lxrandr doesn't >> really attempt or itnended to provide this feature. > On 03/13/2014 01:21 AM, Israel wrote: >> I use arandr >> It works very well and is very easy to use. I had the same issue as you >> do. >> sudo apt-get install arandr > Thanks. arandr is very useful, I hadn't seen it before. > > Yes, lxrandr seems to be missing the side-by-side capability so I've put > in a feature request: > > https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/lxrandr/+bug/1291817 > > Regards, > /Lars > great I will mark it affecting me so it gets confirmed! -- Regards -- Lubuntu-users mailing list [email protected] Modify settings or unsubscribe at: https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/lubuntu-users
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