How do I force prompts to display on my primary monitor in Windows?











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Every time there's a prompt of some kind, or a dialog box, it's displayed on my secondary monitor. Here's an example.





  1. Win+R (Run prompt displays on secondary)


  2. notepad and Enter (Notepad.exe displays on primary)


  3. Ctrl+S (Save as dialog displays on secondary)


Why is it behaving like this, and is there a way to force all new prompts, dialog boxes, program windows, etc. to display on my primary monitor?




Honestly, I thought that's what the option "make this my main display" was for?!?...




Would it not be more intelligent if the program windows were displayed on the secondary monitor? In the example above, have the Run prompt and Save as dialog displayed on primary, and then pop that Notepad.exe window on the secondary monitor?



What controls this anyway? I know that Windows can remember the last location on the monitor where you had a certain program window, and then when you open that same window again, it would be displayed in same location. So I tried to open the Run prompt, move it over to my primary monitor, open a notepad from it, close everything down, and open the Run prompt again. It displayed on the secondary monitor again........










share|improve this question
























  • Just to avoid any confusion. Your primary display is the one with taskbar. Is this correct? And popups/dialogues are appearing on the other display (the one without taskbar). Is this what you are saying?
    – Art Gertner
    May 14 '14 at 8:42












  • @smc Yes, the one with the taskbar is in front of me. I have two monitors. The secondary monitor is on my left. I am using the extended desktop mode. FWIW, the monitor in front of me is identified as number 2 in Screen Resolution (control panel). But I have selected it and checked "make this my main display"?!...
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 8:51










  • Have you used standard windows interface to set up your multiple displays? Or have you used software specific to your Graphic Adapter?
    – Art Gertner
    May 14 '14 at 8:58










  • I tried disconnecting them now, and then reconnecting each as a single monitor. The "primary" is connected with VGA, and the secondary with DVI. If I only connect one of them, it's identified as number 1. And if I connect VGA first, and then DVI, or DVI first, and then VGA, it doesn't matter. The VGA (primary) is always identified as number 2 and DVI as number 1. So whichever is connected with DVI takes precedence over VGA? I know it's better to use DVI, but what the hell... need to lift and move monitors around to get the results you want?? Ridiculous!
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 9:00










  • @smc It's all Windows settings (control panel, screen resolution). Would it help to use Catalyst Control Center instead? I have it installed as this is an AMD A10 APU system, so it's inevitable not to have the AMD software installed (chipset and gpu).
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 9:02















up vote
4
down vote

favorite
1












Every time there's a prompt of some kind, or a dialog box, it's displayed on my secondary monitor. Here's an example.





  1. Win+R (Run prompt displays on secondary)


  2. notepad and Enter (Notepad.exe displays on primary)


  3. Ctrl+S (Save as dialog displays on secondary)


Why is it behaving like this, and is there a way to force all new prompts, dialog boxes, program windows, etc. to display on my primary monitor?




Honestly, I thought that's what the option "make this my main display" was for?!?...




Would it not be more intelligent if the program windows were displayed on the secondary monitor? In the example above, have the Run prompt and Save as dialog displayed on primary, and then pop that Notepad.exe window on the secondary monitor?



What controls this anyway? I know that Windows can remember the last location on the monitor where you had a certain program window, and then when you open that same window again, it would be displayed in same location. So I tried to open the Run prompt, move it over to my primary monitor, open a notepad from it, close everything down, and open the Run prompt again. It displayed on the secondary monitor again........










share|improve this question
























  • Just to avoid any confusion. Your primary display is the one with taskbar. Is this correct? And popups/dialogues are appearing on the other display (the one without taskbar). Is this what you are saying?
    – Art Gertner
    May 14 '14 at 8:42












  • @smc Yes, the one with the taskbar is in front of me. I have two monitors. The secondary monitor is on my left. I am using the extended desktop mode. FWIW, the monitor in front of me is identified as number 2 in Screen Resolution (control panel). But I have selected it and checked "make this my main display"?!...
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 8:51










  • Have you used standard windows interface to set up your multiple displays? Or have you used software specific to your Graphic Adapter?
    – Art Gertner
    May 14 '14 at 8:58










  • I tried disconnecting them now, and then reconnecting each as a single monitor. The "primary" is connected with VGA, and the secondary with DVI. If I only connect one of them, it's identified as number 1. And if I connect VGA first, and then DVI, or DVI first, and then VGA, it doesn't matter. The VGA (primary) is always identified as number 2 and DVI as number 1. So whichever is connected with DVI takes precedence over VGA? I know it's better to use DVI, but what the hell... need to lift and move monitors around to get the results you want?? Ridiculous!
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 9:00










  • @smc It's all Windows settings (control panel, screen resolution). Would it help to use Catalyst Control Center instead? I have it installed as this is an AMD A10 APU system, so it's inevitable not to have the AMD software installed (chipset and gpu).
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 9:02













up vote
4
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
4
down vote

favorite
1






1





Every time there's a prompt of some kind, or a dialog box, it's displayed on my secondary monitor. Here's an example.





  1. Win+R (Run prompt displays on secondary)


  2. notepad and Enter (Notepad.exe displays on primary)


  3. Ctrl+S (Save as dialog displays on secondary)


Why is it behaving like this, and is there a way to force all new prompts, dialog boxes, program windows, etc. to display on my primary monitor?




Honestly, I thought that's what the option "make this my main display" was for?!?...




Would it not be more intelligent if the program windows were displayed on the secondary monitor? In the example above, have the Run prompt and Save as dialog displayed on primary, and then pop that Notepad.exe window on the secondary monitor?



What controls this anyway? I know that Windows can remember the last location on the monitor where you had a certain program window, and then when you open that same window again, it would be displayed in same location. So I tried to open the Run prompt, move it over to my primary monitor, open a notepad from it, close everything down, and open the Run prompt again. It displayed on the secondary monitor again........










share|improve this question















Every time there's a prompt of some kind, or a dialog box, it's displayed on my secondary monitor. Here's an example.





  1. Win+R (Run prompt displays on secondary)


  2. notepad and Enter (Notepad.exe displays on primary)


  3. Ctrl+S (Save as dialog displays on secondary)


Why is it behaving like this, and is there a way to force all new prompts, dialog boxes, program windows, etc. to display on my primary monitor?




Honestly, I thought that's what the option "make this my main display" was for?!?...




Would it not be more intelligent if the program windows were displayed on the secondary monitor? In the example above, have the Run prompt and Save as dialog displayed on primary, and then pop that Notepad.exe window on the secondary monitor?



What controls this anyway? I know that Windows can remember the last location on the monitor where you had a certain program window, and then when you open that same window again, it would be displayed in same location. So I tried to open the Run prompt, move it over to my primary monitor, open a notepad from it, close everything down, and open the Run prompt again. It displayed on the secondary monitor again........







windows-7 windows multiple-monitors






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited May 14 '14 at 8:47

























asked May 14 '14 at 8:40









Samir

11.1k56138201




11.1k56138201












  • Just to avoid any confusion. Your primary display is the one with taskbar. Is this correct? And popups/dialogues are appearing on the other display (the one without taskbar). Is this what you are saying?
    – Art Gertner
    May 14 '14 at 8:42












  • @smc Yes, the one with the taskbar is in front of me. I have two monitors. The secondary monitor is on my left. I am using the extended desktop mode. FWIW, the monitor in front of me is identified as number 2 in Screen Resolution (control panel). But I have selected it and checked "make this my main display"?!...
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 8:51










  • Have you used standard windows interface to set up your multiple displays? Or have you used software specific to your Graphic Adapter?
    – Art Gertner
    May 14 '14 at 8:58










  • I tried disconnecting them now, and then reconnecting each as a single monitor. The "primary" is connected with VGA, and the secondary with DVI. If I only connect one of them, it's identified as number 1. And if I connect VGA first, and then DVI, or DVI first, and then VGA, it doesn't matter. The VGA (primary) is always identified as number 2 and DVI as number 1. So whichever is connected with DVI takes precedence over VGA? I know it's better to use DVI, but what the hell... need to lift and move monitors around to get the results you want?? Ridiculous!
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 9:00










  • @smc It's all Windows settings (control panel, screen resolution). Would it help to use Catalyst Control Center instead? I have it installed as this is an AMD A10 APU system, so it's inevitable not to have the AMD software installed (chipset and gpu).
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 9:02


















  • Just to avoid any confusion. Your primary display is the one with taskbar. Is this correct? And popups/dialogues are appearing on the other display (the one without taskbar). Is this what you are saying?
    – Art Gertner
    May 14 '14 at 8:42












  • @smc Yes, the one with the taskbar is in front of me. I have two monitors. The secondary monitor is on my left. I am using the extended desktop mode. FWIW, the monitor in front of me is identified as number 2 in Screen Resolution (control panel). But I have selected it and checked "make this my main display"?!...
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 8:51










  • Have you used standard windows interface to set up your multiple displays? Or have you used software specific to your Graphic Adapter?
    – Art Gertner
    May 14 '14 at 8:58










  • I tried disconnecting them now, and then reconnecting each as a single monitor. The "primary" is connected with VGA, and the secondary with DVI. If I only connect one of them, it's identified as number 1. And if I connect VGA first, and then DVI, or DVI first, and then VGA, it doesn't matter. The VGA (primary) is always identified as number 2 and DVI as number 1. So whichever is connected with DVI takes precedence over VGA? I know it's better to use DVI, but what the hell... need to lift and move monitors around to get the results you want?? Ridiculous!
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 9:00










  • @smc It's all Windows settings (control panel, screen resolution). Would it help to use Catalyst Control Center instead? I have it installed as this is an AMD A10 APU system, so it's inevitable not to have the AMD software installed (chipset and gpu).
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 9:02
















Just to avoid any confusion. Your primary display is the one with taskbar. Is this correct? And popups/dialogues are appearing on the other display (the one without taskbar). Is this what you are saying?
– Art Gertner
May 14 '14 at 8:42






Just to avoid any confusion. Your primary display is the one with taskbar. Is this correct? And popups/dialogues are appearing on the other display (the one without taskbar). Is this what you are saying?
– Art Gertner
May 14 '14 at 8:42














@smc Yes, the one with the taskbar is in front of me. I have two monitors. The secondary monitor is on my left. I am using the extended desktop mode. FWIW, the monitor in front of me is identified as number 2 in Screen Resolution (control panel). But I have selected it and checked "make this my main display"?!...
– Samir
May 14 '14 at 8:51




@smc Yes, the one with the taskbar is in front of me. I have two monitors. The secondary monitor is on my left. I am using the extended desktop mode. FWIW, the monitor in front of me is identified as number 2 in Screen Resolution (control panel). But I have selected it and checked "make this my main display"?!...
– Samir
May 14 '14 at 8:51












Have you used standard windows interface to set up your multiple displays? Or have you used software specific to your Graphic Adapter?
– Art Gertner
May 14 '14 at 8:58




Have you used standard windows interface to set up your multiple displays? Or have you used software specific to your Graphic Adapter?
– Art Gertner
May 14 '14 at 8:58












I tried disconnecting them now, and then reconnecting each as a single monitor. The "primary" is connected with VGA, and the secondary with DVI. If I only connect one of them, it's identified as number 1. And if I connect VGA first, and then DVI, or DVI first, and then VGA, it doesn't matter. The VGA (primary) is always identified as number 2 and DVI as number 1. So whichever is connected with DVI takes precedence over VGA? I know it's better to use DVI, but what the hell... need to lift and move monitors around to get the results you want?? Ridiculous!
– Samir
May 14 '14 at 9:00




I tried disconnecting them now, and then reconnecting each as a single monitor. The "primary" is connected with VGA, and the secondary with DVI. If I only connect one of them, it's identified as number 1. And if I connect VGA first, and then DVI, or DVI first, and then VGA, it doesn't matter. The VGA (primary) is always identified as number 2 and DVI as number 1. So whichever is connected with DVI takes precedence over VGA? I know it's better to use DVI, but what the hell... need to lift and move monitors around to get the results you want?? Ridiculous!
– Samir
May 14 '14 at 9:00












@smc It's all Windows settings (control panel, screen resolution). Would it help to use Catalyst Control Center instead? I have it installed as this is an AMD A10 APU system, so it's inevitable not to have the AMD software installed (chipset and gpu).
– Samir
May 14 '14 at 9:02




@smc It's all Windows settings (control panel, screen resolution). Would it help to use Catalyst Control Center instead? I have it installed as this is an AMD A10 APU system, so it's inevitable not to have the AMD software installed (chipset and gpu).
– Samir
May 14 '14 at 9:02










3 Answers
3






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
3
down vote













Try restoring the window, to it's normal size, then move it to the primary monitor. Then x out (shut down). Now Windows should remember where it last was. Then if you re-open it, then you can choose to maximize it and shut down again. Then it will re-open on the primary in a maximized window.



This worked for me when I noticed Adobe kept opening on my secondary monitor and I started looking for solutions online.






share|improve this answer

















  • 1




    This doesn’t seem to work for (Win)+(R) — although it’s not clear whether this was ever really a problem.  It does seem to work for application windows.
    – G-Man
    Apr 25 '15 at 1:58










  • I am unable to test this at the moment. But thanks for sharing your findings.
    – Samir
    Apr 25 '15 at 21:58


















up vote
1
down vote













Yup, the "make this my main display" in Windows can't move prompts and dialog boxes over to the monitor you select. It is only able to move the taskbar and program windows over to that monitor. To see all program windows on that monitor, you might need to close the program windows first, then reopen them.



So here's what I did:




  • Lifted my "primary" (i.e. "2", i.e. VGA) monitor and put it on the
    left.

  • Lifted my "secondary" (i.e. "1", i.e. DVI) monitor and put it on the
    right.

  • In Screen Resolution (Control Panel), selected "1" and ticked "make
    this my main display".


So now, both program windows and prompts and dialogs display on the monitor in front of me.





  1. Win+R (Run prompt displays on primary (DVI))


  2. notepad and Enter (Notepad.exe displays on primary (DVI))


  3. Ctrl+S (Save as dialog displays on primary (DVI))


Voilà! Set and done!






share|improve this answer



















  • 1




    This is ambiguous. What exactly did you do to resolve your issue? The description you have provided seems like an ordinary setup. I assumed that you had it initially.
    – Art Gertner
    May 14 '14 at 9:24










  • Ambiguous? Which part? You want me to add a before/after for comparison?
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 9:58










  • I believe it would be useful for anyone with similar problem.
    – Art Gertner
    May 14 '14 at 10:09


















up vote
0
down vote













I had similar issue,but for the windows command prompt.
I had a secondary monitor which I use it for my development VM, So whenever I open my command prompt on my primary monitor, the window use to goto the secondary monitor, and the hard thing is when you are disconnected from the secondary monitor the cmd window is still not displayed in the primary monitor, but it will be virtually displayed to the secondary monitor, and you can only see that in the task bar of the primary monitor.



solution:



open the command prompt and right-click on that window, make the winodw-position values {left, top} to zero.
now close the prompt and open again, it will open in the primary window always even if the secondary monitor is connected.!!






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    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes








    3 Answers
    3






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    3
    down vote













    Try restoring the window, to it's normal size, then move it to the primary monitor. Then x out (shut down). Now Windows should remember where it last was. Then if you re-open it, then you can choose to maximize it and shut down again. Then it will re-open on the primary in a maximized window.



    This worked for me when I noticed Adobe kept opening on my secondary monitor and I started looking for solutions online.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 1




      This doesn’t seem to work for (Win)+(R) — although it’s not clear whether this was ever really a problem.  It does seem to work for application windows.
      – G-Man
      Apr 25 '15 at 1:58










    • I am unable to test this at the moment. But thanks for sharing your findings.
      – Samir
      Apr 25 '15 at 21:58















    up vote
    3
    down vote













    Try restoring the window, to it's normal size, then move it to the primary monitor. Then x out (shut down). Now Windows should remember where it last was. Then if you re-open it, then you can choose to maximize it and shut down again. Then it will re-open on the primary in a maximized window.



    This worked for me when I noticed Adobe kept opening on my secondary monitor and I started looking for solutions online.






    share|improve this answer

















    • 1




      This doesn’t seem to work for (Win)+(R) — although it’s not clear whether this was ever really a problem.  It does seem to work for application windows.
      – G-Man
      Apr 25 '15 at 1:58










    • I am unable to test this at the moment. But thanks for sharing your findings.
      – Samir
      Apr 25 '15 at 21:58













    up vote
    3
    down vote










    up vote
    3
    down vote









    Try restoring the window, to it's normal size, then move it to the primary monitor. Then x out (shut down). Now Windows should remember where it last was. Then if you re-open it, then you can choose to maximize it and shut down again. Then it will re-open on the primary in a maximized window.



    This worked for me when I noticed Adobe kept opening on my secondary monitor and I started looking for solutions online.






    share|improve this answer












    Try restoring the window, to it's normal size, then move it to the primary monitor. Then x out (shut down). Now Windows should remember where it last was. Then if you re-open it, then you can choose to maximize it and shut down again. Then it will re-open on the primary in a maximized window.



    This worked for me when I noticed Adobe kept opening on my secondary monitor and I started looking for solutions online.







    share|improve this answer












    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer










    answered Apr 25 '15 at 0:51









    Kevin Lee

    312




    312








    • 1




      This doesn’t seem to work for (Win)+(R) — although it’s not clear whether this was ever really a problem.  It does seem to work for application windows.
      – G-Man
      Apr 25 '15 at 1:58










    • I am unable to test this at the moment. But thanks for sharing your findings.
      – Samir
      Apr 25 '15 at 21:58














    • 1




      This doesn’t seem to work for (Win)+(R) — although it’s not clear whether this was ever really a problem.  It does seem to work for application windows.
      – G-Man
      Apr 25 '15 at 1:58










    • I am unable to test this at the moment. But thanks for sharing your findings.
      – Samir
      Apr 25 '15 at 21:58








    1




    1




    This doesn’t seem to work for (Win)+(R) — although it’s not clear whether this was ever really a problem.  It does seem to work for application windows.
    – G-Man
    Apr 25 '15 at 1:58




    This doesn’t seem to work for (Win)+(R) — although it’s not clear whether this was ever really a problem.  It does seem to work for application windows.
    – G-Man
    Apr 25 '15 at 1:58












    I am unable to test this at the moment. But thanks for sharing your findings.
    – Samir
    Apr 25 '15 at 21:58




    I am unable to test this at the moment. But thanks for sharing your findings.
    – Samir
    Apr 25 '15 at 21:58












    up vote
    1
    down vote













    Yup, the "make this my main display" in Windows can't move prompts and dialog boxes over to the monitor you select. It is only able to move the taskbar and program windows over to that monitor. To see all program windows on that monitor, you might need to close the program windows first, then reopen them.



    So here's what I did:




    • Lifted my "primary" (i.e. "2", i.e. VGA) monitor and put it on the
      left.

    • Lifted my "secondary" (i.e. "1", i.e. DVI) monitor and put it on the
      right.

    • In Screen Resolution (Control Panel), selected "1" and ticked "make
      this my main display".


    So now, both program windows and prompts and dialogs display on the monitor in front of me.





    1. Win+R (Run prompt displays on primary (DVI))


    2. notepad and Enter (Notepad.exe displays on primary (DVI))


    3. Ctrl+S (Save as dialog displays on primary (DVI))


    Voilà! Set and done!






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      This is ambiguous. What exactly did you do to resolve your issue? The description you have provided seems like an ordinary setup. I assumed that you had it initially.
      – Art Gertner
      May 14 '14 at 9:24










    • Ambiguous? Which part? You want me to add a before/after for comparison?
      – Samir
      May 14 '14 at 9:58










    • I believe it would be useful for anyone with similar problem.
      – Art Gertner
      May 14 '14 at 10:09















    up vote
    1
    down vote













    Yup, the "make this my main display" in Windows can't move prompts and dialog boxes over to the monitor you select. It is only able to move the taskbar and program windows over to that monitor. To see all program windows on that monitor, you might need to close the program windows first, then reopen them.



    So here's what I did:




    • Lifted my "primary" (i.e. "2", i.e. VGA) monitor and put it on the
      left.

    • Lifted my "secondary" (i.e. "1", i.e. DVI) monitor and put it on the
      right.

    • In Screen Resolution (Control Panel), selected "1" and ticked "make
      this my main display".


    So now, both program windows and prompts and dialogs display on the monitor in front of me.





    1. Win+R (Run prompt displays on primary (DVI))


    2. notepad and Enter (Notepad.exe displays on primary (DVI))


    3. Ctrl+S (Save as dialog displays on primary (DVI))


    Voilà! Set and done!






    share|improve this answer



















    • 1




      This is ambiguous. What exactly did you do to resolve your issue? The description you have provided seems like an ordinary setup. I assumed that you had it initially.
      – Art Gertner
      May 14 '14 at 9:24










    • Ambiguous? Which part? You want me to add a before/after for comparison?
      – Samir
      May 14 '14 at 9:58










    • I believe it would be useful for anyone with similar problem.
      – Art Gertner
      May 14 '14 at 10:09













    up vote
    1
    down vote










    up vote
    1
    down vote









    Yup, the "make this my main display" in Windows can't move prompts and dialog boxes over to the monitor you select. It is only able to move the taskbar and program windows over to that monitor. To see all program windows on that monitor, you might need to close the program windows first, then reopen them.



    So here's what I did:




    • Lifted my "primary" (i.e. "2", i.e. VGA) monitor and put it on the
      left.

    • Lifted my "secondary" (i.e. "1", i.e. DVI) monitor and put it on the
      right.

    • In Screen Resolution (Control Panel), selected "1" and ticked "make
      this my main display".


    So now, both program windows and prompts and dialogs display on the monitor in front of me.





    1. Win+R (Run prompt displays on primary (DVI))


    2. notepad and Enter (Notepad.exe displays on primary (DVI))


    3. Ctrl+S (Save as dialog displays on primary (DVI))


    Voilà! Set and done!






    share|improve this answer














    Yup, the "make this my main display" in Windows can't move prompts and dialog boxes over to the monitor you select. It is only able to move the taskbar and program windows over to that monitor. To see all program windows on that monitor, you might need to close the program windows first, then reopen them.



    So here's what I did:




    • Lifted my "primary" (i.e. "2", i.e. VGA) monitor and put it on the
      left.

    • Lifted my "secondary" (i.e. "1", i.e. DVI) monitor and put it on the
      right.

    • In Screen Resolution (Control Panel), selected "1" and ticked "make
      this my main display".


    So now, both program windows and prompts and dialogs display on the monitor in front of me.





    1. Win+R (Run prompt displays on primary (DVI))


    2. notepad and Enter (Notepad.exe displays on primary (DVI))


    3. Ctrl+S (Save as dialog displays on primary (DVI))


    Voilà! Set and done!







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited May 14 '14 at 9:56

























    answered May 14 '14 at 9:16









    Samir

    11.1k56138201




    11.1k56138201








    • 1




      This is ambiguous. What exactly did you do to resolve your issue? The description you have provided seems like an ordinary setup. I assumed that you had it initially.
      – Art Gertner
      May 14 '14 at 9:24










    • Ambiguous? Which part? You want me to add a before/after for comparison?
      – Samir
      May 14 '14 at 9:58










    • I believe it would be useful for anyone with similar problem.
      – Art Gertner
      May 14 '14 at 10:09














    • 1




      This is ambiguous. What exactly did you do to resolve your issue? The description you have provided seems like an ordinary setup. I assumed that you had it initially.
      – Art Gertner
      May 14 '14 at 9:24










    • Ambiguous? Which part? You want me to add a before/after for comparison?
      – Samir
      May 14 '14 at 9:58










    • I believe it would be useful for anyone with similar problem.
      – Art Gertner
      May 14 '14 at 10:09








    1




    1




    This is ambiguous. What exactly did you do to resolve your issue? The description you have provided seems like an ordinary setup. I assumed that you had it initially.
    – Art Gertner
    May 14 '14 at 9:24




    This is ambiguous. What exactly did you do to resolve your issue? The description you have provided seems like an ordinary setup. I assumed that you had it initially.
    – Art Gertner
    May 14 '14 at 9:24












    Ambiguous? Which part? You want me to add a before/after for comparison?
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 9:58




    Ambiguous? Which part? You want me to add a before/after for comparison?
    – Samir
    May 14 '14 at 9:58












    I believe it would be useful for anyone with similar problem.
    – Art Gertner
    May 14 '14 at 10:09




    I believe it would be useful for anyone with similar problem.
    – Art Gertner
    May 14 '14 at 10:09










    up vote
    0
    down vote













    I had similar issue,but for the windows command prompt.
    I had a secondary monitor which I use it for my development VM, So whenever I open my command prompt on my primary monitor, the window use to goto the secondary monitor, and the hard thing is when you are disconnected from the secondary monitor the cmd window is still not displayed in the primary monitor, but it will be virtually displayed to the secondary monitor, and you can only see that in the task bar of the primary monitor.



    solution:



    open the command prompt and right-click on that window, make the winodw-position values {left, top} to zero.
    now close the prompt and open again, it will open in the primary window always even if the secondary monitor is connected.!!






    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      0
      down vote













      I had similar issue,but for the windows command prompt.
      I had a secondary monitor which I use it for my development VM, So whenever I open my command prompt on my primary monitor, the window use to goto the secondary monitor, and the hard thing is when you are disconnected from the secondary monitor the cmd window is still not displayed in the primary monitor, but it will be virtually displayed to the secondary monitor, and you can only see that in the task bar of the primary monitor.



      solution:



      open the command prompt and right-click on that window, make the winodw-position values {left, top} to zero.
      now close the prompt and open again, it will open in the primary window always even if the secondary monitor is connected.!!






      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        0
        down vote










        up vote
        0
        down vote









        I had similar issue,but for the windows command prompt.
        I had a secondary monitor which I use it for my development VM, So whenever I open my command prompt on my primary monitor, the window use to goto the secondary monitor, and the hard thing is when you are disconnected from the secondary monitor the cmd window is still not displayed in the primary monitor, but it will be virtually displayed to the secondary monitor, and you can only see that in the task bar of the primary monitor.



        solution:



        open the command prompt and right-click on that window, make the winodw-position values {left, top} to zero.
        now close the prompt and open again, it will open in the primary window always even if the secondary monitor is connected.!!






        share|improve this answer












        I had similar issue,but for the windows command prompt.
        I had a secondary monitor which I use it for my development VM, So whenever I open my command prompt on my primary monitor, the window use to goto the secondary monitor, and the hard thing is when you are disconnected from the secondary monitor the cmd window is still not displayed in the primary monitor, but it will be virtually displayed to the secondary monitor, and you can only see that in the task bar of the primary monitor.



        solution:



        open the command prompt and right-click on that window, make the winodw-position values {left, top} to zero.
        now close the prompt and open again, it will open in the primary window always even if the secondary monitor is connected.!!







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Dec 3 at 7:15









        user969349

        1




        1






























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