~~NOTOC~~ {{ :xfce:xfce4-settings.mouse.png?nolink|}} ====== xfce4-settings - Mouse and Touchpad ====== * **[[#Device|Device]]** * **[[#Buttons and Feedback|Buttons and Feedback]]** * **[[#Touchpad|Touchpad]]** * **[[#Tablet|Tablet]]** * **[[#Behavior|Behavior]]** * **[[#Drag and Drop|Drag and Drop]]** * **[[#Double Click|Double Click]]** * **[[#Cursor|Cursor]]** * **[[#Device Properties|Device Properties]]** ---- ===== Device ===== ? Device ! With this dropdown menu you can select the device you want to edit, the settings below will adjust to the selected device. The list shows all connected pointer devices. ? Enable this device ! Slide this option left to turn a device off. If a device is disabled, it won't send any coordinate updates to the pointer. By default all (new) devices are enabled.
{{:xfce:xfce4-settings:xfce4-settings-mouse-devices.png|Mouse Preferences: Devices Settings Tab}}
[[|Back To Top]] ---- ===== Buttons and Feedback ===== === Buttons === ? Right-handed and Left-handed ! If you select {gui>Left-handed} the primary and secondary buttons on the mouse will be reversed. ? Reverse scroll direction ! If this option is enabled, the scroll direction will be reversed (sometimes called "natural scrolling"). If you want to see the resulting button map; use the ''xinput'' utility. First find the device ID using ''xinput list'' and then view the mapping of the device with ''xinput get-button-map ''. === Pointer Speed === ? Acceleration ! The factor at which the pointer's speed will increase as the cursor is moved, when the device moves more than {gui>Sensitivity} pixels in a short time. ? Sensitivity ! The number of pixels the pointer must move in a short time before it starts accelerating. [[|Back To Top]] ---- ===== Touchpad =====
{{:xfce:xfce4-settings:xfce4-settings-mouse-devices-synaptics.png|Mouse Preferences: Synaptics Touchpad Settings Window}}
=== General === ? Disable touchpad while typing ! Turn the touchpad off while typing to prevent accidental clicks. The settings daemon will start the following command in the background when enabled: ''syndaemon -i 2.0 -K -R''. ? Tap touchpad to click ! When this option is selected, tapping the touchpad with your finger will preform the same action as clicking the primary mouse button. The device property ''Synaptics Tap Action'' will be set to ''1 2 3 ...''. ! To click, tap on the touchpad. To double-click, tap twice. To drag an item, double-tap but don't lift your finger after the second tap. Drag the item where you want it, then lift your finger to drop. ? Scrolling ? Disabled ! Disable scrolling with the touchpad. This will unset both the device properties below. ? Edge scrolling ! When this is selected, dragging your finger up and down along the right side of your touchpad will scroll vertically. If you also select {gui>Enable horizontal scrolling}, dragging your finger left and right along the bottom of your touchpad will scroll horizontally. This will set the device property ''Synaptics Edge Scrolling''. ? Two-finger scrolling ! When this is selected, tapping and dragging with one finger will work as normal, but if you drag two fingers across any part of the touchpad, it will scroll instead. If you also select {gui>Enable horizontal scrolling}, you can move your fingers left and right to scroll horizontally. Be careful to space your fingers a bit apart. If your fingers are too close together, they just look like one big finger to your touchpad. This will set the device property ''Synaptics Two-Finger Scrolling''. ? Enable horizontal scrolling ! Allow scrolling horizontal. The way horizontal scrolling works depends on the {gui>Scrolling} type you've selected. [[|Back To Top]] ---- ===== Tablet ===== Currently only devices using the Wacom driver are supported.
{{:xfce:xfce4-settings:xfce4-settings-mouse-devices-wacom.png|Mouse Preferences: Wacom Tablet Settings Window}}
? Tracking mode ? Pen (absolute) ! In absolute mode the active area of the tablet will be mapped to the screen. Every time you go down to the tablet at the same point with an absolute device the pointer will appear at the same point of the screen. ? Mouse (relative) ! In relative mode the tablet has the behavior of a mouse. This means, that if you take the pen off from the surface, move it and go down again, the pointer does (ideally) not move. ? Rotation ? None (right-handed) ! The tablet is not rotated in software and uses its natural rotation. ? Half (left-handed) ! The tablet is rotated by 180 degrees (upside-down). ? Clockwise ! The tablet is rotated 90 degrees clockwise. ? Counterclockwise ! The tablet is rotated 90 degrees counter-clockwise. [[|Back To Top]] ---- ===== Behavior =====
{{:xfce:xfce4-settings:xfce4-settings-mouse-behaviour.png|Mouse Preferences: Behavior Settings Tab}}
=== Drag and Drop === ? Threshold ! The number of pixels the pointer must move before a drag operation will start. Default value is 8 pixels. === Double Click === ? Time ! Two mouse clicks in less than this length of time (in milliseconds) will be considered a double click. Default value is 250 ms. ? Distance ! The mouse pointer cannot move farther than this distance between two clicks for them to be considered a double click. Default value is 4 pixels. [[|Back To Top]] ---- ===== Cursor =====
{{:xfce:xfce4-settings:xfce4-settings-mouse-theme.png|Cursor Theming Tab Window}}
Select your preferred mouse theme. It is wise to log out and log in after a mouse theme change, so all applications pick up the new cursors. You can install new cursor themes by butting them in the ''~/.icons'' directory. Make sure the directory layout looks like ''~/.icons//cursors''. [[|Back To Top]] ---- ===== Device Properties ===== The Synaptics and Wacom interface in the dialogs shows only the most important settings, but there are a lot more settings for input devices you can control. Xfsettingsd is capable of setting all sorts of device properties; however, you have to manually set them in the pointers [[xfce:xfconf:|xfconf]] channel which is not always easy. First you need to find the correct device using the ''xinput'' utility. When you run this command it will list the devices on your system. $ xinput list Virtual core pointer id=2 [master pointer (3)] Virtual core XTEST pointer id=4 [slave pointer (2)] SynPS/2 Synaptics TouchPad id=8 [slave pointer (2)] Virtual core keyboard id=3 [master keyboard (2)] Virtual core XTEST keyboard id=5 [slave keyboard (3)] Power Button id=6 [slave keyboard (3)] Now let's assume you want to modify a special property of the touchpad, lets say the coasting speed. If you run the command below it will show a long list with all the different properties. $ xinput list-props "SynPS/2 Synaptics TouchPad" Device 'SynPS/2 Synaptics TouchPad': [...] Synaptics Coasting Speed (274): 45.000000 Synaptics Scrolling Distance (252): 100, 100 [...] Next, it translates the names into a valid [[xfce:xfconf:|Xfconf]] property name. The following characters are allowed: ''A-Z a-z 0-9 - _'' and spaces are replaced with an underscore. So this means ''SynPS/2 Synaptics TouchPad'' will become ''SynPS2_Synaptics_TouchPad''. Same goes for the property name and devices properties are stored under ''//Properties/''. As you can see the value above is stored as a double (45.000), so to disable coasting you have to run the following [[xfce:xfconf:xfconf-query|xfconf-query]] command: xfconf-query -c pointers -p /SynPS2_Synaptics_TouchPad/Properties/Synaptics_Coasting_Speed -n -t double -s 0 Use ''xinput list-props'' to check if the property is applied. In case the device property is an array, it will be show like ''Synaptics Scrolling Distance''; a comma separated list. This value is an integer because the 100 has no precision. xfconf-query -c pointers -p /SynPS2_Synaptics_TouchPad/Properties/Synaptics_Scrolling_Distance -n -t int -t int -s 50 -s 80 [[|Back To Top]] ---- [[:start|Return to Xfce Main Documentation Page]] [[:xfce:xfce4-settings:start:|Return to xfce4-settings Main Documentation Page]]