Also the workaround does indeed prove it can be done, right? So why you even claim it can't, when it can? I did write "To somehow be able to adjust the width of the first column", not that it had to be at the column top .
Also the workaround does indeed prove it can be done, right? So why you even claim it can't, when it can? I did write "To somehow be able to adjust the width of the first column", not that it had to be in a header area.
Why not making the workaround a little more obvious then? Why do you have to go all left before going right widens the first column?
No direct way to adjust first column in Content pane
Thanks Steven. I saved a bookmark for that page.
There doesn’t seem to be a way to choose to restore a successful and verified multi-partition image without doing this to the exact same device name. Or is there a way? Background: I used clonezilla-live-20191024-eoan-amd64 to clone a full MBR drive with Windows (Vista) on a Mac to a disk image. This is stored on an external USB. So I have right now an internal sda macOS (SSD) HFS+ sdb CloneZilla USB stick FAT32 sdc Target drive in a Voyager dock (original cloned HDD MBR/NTFS, but target is SSD)...
So in the end I made use of the fact that I had copied the source drive 3 times and one per each letter, so when I made use of expert mode with MBR writing active I managed to write one of these multi-part images to the new drive and boot successfully from it. As it's not always, or even often you need to write your data, to a drive in the same system, it would certainly be useful to be able to write also a multi-part image to a completely other drive. At least in expert mode. I'll have a look at...
You can resize the partition from the command line when booted from the Clonezilla drive and also from Windows or Linux, using the System tools. It's an OS or tool thing mostly possibly, but I think if search for the OS or Clonezilla and "change partition size" you can find out about the options.