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After migrating to new Sequoia version, the dock cannot be moved to another monitor

After migrating to new Sequoia version, the dock bar cannot be moved to another monitor.

I am using the usual "move the Dock to a different display by moving your cursor to that display, and then moving the cursor as far down" but doesnt work.

I tried setting the monitor as primary but the dock always stays in the laptop monitor.

Thanks in advance for the assistance.

MacBook Pro 14″, macOS 15.0

Posted on Sep 18, 2024 2:26 AM

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Posted on Sep 21, 2024 9:20 AM

To avoid confusion and since they never replied, I'll reply since I'm have the same issue and believe I know what they are talking about. Plus this might help others for a temporary solution until Apple figures out a fix. After updating to Sequoia last night, the issue started for me.


Prior to updating to Sequoia, in Sonoma or whichever prior iOS people had, we had our secondary and Third monitors positioned above the Macbook in the "arrange display" in display settings (what he's showing in that diagram). What he's pointing to isn't the seem, it's where the dock would appear if you hovered over that section with the cursor (it won't move to both, just which ever you are hovering over at the time). With the update to Sequoia, the dock no longer moves if you have the monitors arranged above the Macbook in "Arrange Display". That's the main issue.


The only solution I have found is to put the monitors side by side and then the dock will move between monitors, which works but not how my monitors are positioned. So that's where the frustration lies since it worked perfectly before but now awkward and not intuitive.


So it's definitely a bug that needs to be addressed.

77 replies

Sep 18, 2024 9:04 AM in response to ascdit

ascdit wrote:

Maybe... you can look this video
https://youtu.be/JUUyrW-vyWU?feature=shared
before Sequoia, it can be moved like this, whether it is two screens or three screens.

It is worth explaining that I hope this function exists, because it is very convenient for me to operate dock more conveniently under multiple monitors.

That is not what I was describing and seemed to get confirmation that we are talking about a seam between displays. If the displays are arranged in the Displays arrangement tab such that there is no seam between the bottom of the external display and the laptop display, then the Dock can be placed there at the bottom of the external display. If there is a seam, then it cannot be placed there.

I have no idea about bouncing the dock around between monitors which is what the video describes.

Sep 23, 2024 2:21 PM in response to timbavd

timbavd wrote:

I have for several years had a 4K screen physically positioned and in settings arranged immediately and centrally above my laptop screen. My large screen 23.5" wide and is as high as its stand will allow, and the laptop sits beneath it and is 13.5" wide, so there's 5" on either side of the top screen where the pointer will not descend.

Prior to Sequoia, I have been able - as described variously above - to position my mouse to one or other of the 5" 'shoulders' of the upper screen and then slide the pointer downwards, with the result that the pointer stays on the upper screen, but the dock shifts to the top screen, above the menu bar of the built-in screen, so I could move up from the lower screen's menu bar onto the dock on the upper screen. This was on both my ARM and my Intel Mac.

Far from having 'never been possible', it has been very ergonomic - reducing the distance my pointer has to travel from the multiplicity of windows I have open across a large area, reducing the distraction from my focus of interest, improving my workflow, and has never resulted in my having to 'play whack-a-mole'. Most of us don't live on 512x342 pixel screens any more, so there are various other decisions made back then which are also probably due for a bit of different thinking - mix the dock into launchpad, context-sensitive application menu, etc.

If you search back through the history of the dock, when it was initially made possible to move between screens, it did not work, whether there was a gap on the edges or not. The dock couldn’t be put on the scene between displays. At some point along the line, Apple made it possible to do what you described. I have no idea whether it was possible or not and when that happened because my monitors have always been the same size and there was no gap, and then I started using my dock on the side since I never use it and it doesn’t take up any vertical real estate. On the side, it is not possible to make it appear in the seam regardless of gaps.

So, it originally did not work, Apple made it work, and like many things, that fix got lost when they rewrote the software for the new OS version.

there are some posts that say, they will restore that function in the next update, but I can’t provide you any information on that, just what others have said

Sep 26, 2024 6:57 AM in response to timsmeej


So it's definitely a bug that needs to be addressed.

That may be, but wanting to have the Dock in a position where it is right in the center of your compound screen is something that I still cannot understand. I know that different people work in different ways, but still... more screens for more real estate, and then waste you space front and center with the Dock. Oh well...


Sep 30, 2024 5:44 AM in response to -ra

I under your setup.

I think it was Barney that already explained why this does not work. The Dock has to be on an edge, and in your situation it would be in the middle of the combined display. You move the cursor to an edge and “bump into it”, which makes the Dock easy to target. In the situation you describe one would easily “overshoot”. You may want it to work like this, and you can ask Apple to change it back. We users can’t do anything about it, either way.


FWIW, the command-tab uses only the keyboard so, right-or left handed should not make any difference, I think. You do use both hands to type, no?

Oct 11, 2024 1:25 AM in response to adiebaker

adiebaker wrote:

Sorry Barney but you're just plain wrong. This has worked for as long as I can remember (I've had a Mac for about 15 years) as described by others. It's just broken in Sequoia. Not sure why you think we'd overshoot the bar at the bottom of the screen, I think everyone using a computer nowadays can navigate using a mouse very accurately. Who wants to scroll all the way down to the bottom of the lowest monitor to open an app? Apple just need to fix it and give users back what they're used to and want.

The Dock is like training wheels for a beginner mac user. Who uses THREE displays and still feels the need to use the Dock just to open an app?

Oct 18, 2024 3:42 PM in response to abueleo

NOT ONLY CAN YOU NOT MOVE THE DOCK BUT WITH THE 15.0.1 UPDATE YOU HAVE NOW LOST THE MENU BAR AT THE TOP OF THE SECOND MONITOR AND WHEN YOU SCROLL TO A DIFFERENT DESKTOP ON ONE MONITOR, IT MOVES THE OTHER ONE TOO - TO A COMPLETELY BLANK SCREEN,


I LEFT WINDOWS AND PC YEARS AGO FOR THIS KIND OF NONSENSE, GET YOUR ACT TOGETHER APPLE - THIS IS A BIG INCONVENIENCE.

After migrating to new Sequoia version, the dock cannot be moved to another monitor

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