Basically, if the macOS menu bar at the top of the screen is, say, 30 pixels tall, then all the toolbars on the side displays had to be positioned 31 or more pixels down from the top of the screen, thereby avoiding the space normally used by the macOS menu bar. * With one exception (KeyShot 9): if any of the toolbars were positioned so that they were occupying the space at the top of the side displays where the macOS menu bar would normally be (the macOS menu bar does not display on my additional screens), then KeyShot would not remember the position of those toolbars. In other words, if I click a dropdown menu in a toolbar that is located on the left display, the menu and its contents will display 3840 pixels to the right, in the same spot but on the main iMac display. If I try loading the saved Workspace, KeyShot just reshuffles the toolbars again on the iMac screen, so every time KeyShot starts, I have to manually move 8 different toolbars around and into position.Īnother related issue is when clicking a dropdown menu in a toolbar on one of the side displays, the dropdown menu itself displays at the same coordinates where it should, but on the main iMac display. KeyShot 9 did fine at remembering the positioning of my toolbars* (and also when loading saved workspaces*), but since upgrading to KeyShot 10, it moves everything to my main iMac screen each time I start KeyShot 10. I have this layout saved using the Workspaces dropdown in the ribbon bar. I have them placed so it makes my workflow as seamless as possible. I split out all of the sub-tabs of the toolbars (Scene, Materials, Environment, Camera, Lighting, etc.) so that I can view and access any one of them at any time. I use my additional displays for all my toolbars and also to display reference images while I work. Two additional displays, one on either side of iMac:
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