h a l f b a k e r yNo serviceable parts inside.
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
Sometimes you want to move fast in a document. Instead of clicking and holding down scrollbars or flipping pages, or tirelessly spinning the mousewheel, just add a logarithmic mode (either a button or a second wheel).
JUCE Demo
http://sourceforge....rebuilt%20binaries/ Take a look at the Widgets demo page of the JuceDemo application (Win/OSX/Linux/iOS and Android on its way) [Dub, Jan 27 2011]
Fitt's Law
http://en.wikipedia.../wiki/Fitts%27s_law It's logarithmically delicious [rmutt, Jan 30 2011]
[link]
|
|
Wouldn't this be "exponential"? |
|
|
Some long menus seem to do this (they scroll slowly at first,
then faster and faster), but this is in the software, not the
mouse. |
|
|
My mouse already has this. If you click and hold down the
spinny wheel you can use the mouse to drag the page
around, and if you drag it to the bottom of the page it will
scroll down at a rate that varies from indetectably slow to
graphics-card-meltingly fast. |
|
|
This is what mice already do - they vary the amount
of cursor movement or scrolling based on how fast
you're moving them. So, if I move my mouse slowly,
moving it all the way across my mousepad will get
the cursor about three quarters of the way across
the screen, whereas if I move it fast, moving it a
quarter of the way across the mousepad gets the
cursor all the way across the screen. |
|
|
Not quite the same, but you might find this interesting: JUCE (an excellent C++ cross-platform development library) allows something like this - Mouse control can be relative - Meaning if a contol is adjusted slowly, it moves in fine detail - and when swiped quickly, adjusts things in coarse-detail. {Linky} |
|
|
Mine is like [DIYMatt]'s, mostly. It has a center scroll wheel. If I click it like a button, a target appears in the screen, and the further away I move the arrow from the mouse, the faster everything slides in that direction. (I've been wanting this idea for one site, and forgot I had that feature.) (It's a LogiTech IntelliMouse.) |
|
|
I think you get this (in windoze) if you check the
'enhance precision' checkbox in the mouse control
panel dialog.. at least for mouse motion, i dont know
about the scrollwheel |
|
|
Seems like I should buy a new mouse, as the desired function might already be there. |
|
|
It could simply be dead. We could stage a funeral, but
it won't help your grieving much. |
|
|
[afinehowdoyoudo], on my mouse (with a standard XP mouse driver IIRC), if I press the mouse wheel when pointing to a scroll bar the mouses movement acts as you describe, but for smooth-scrolling any document. It doesn't take much to move the mouse such that the text, more-or-less, scrolls at your reading speed. |
|
|
Cursor acceleration curves are generally an operating
system feature. [django], I think you would like using a
mouse on a Mac more than using a mouse on Windows. |
|
|
I recently bought a Logitech MX Master mouse, which is
excellent, and it has an acceleration curve (either in the
mouse itself or in the companion software, not sure) that
is more Mac-like, which I like a lot. It also has a scroll
wheel that can be set to rotate freely when you flick it
quickly, which is kinda like this but for scrolling. That's in
hardware, though, so it confuses software that isn't
expecting to be scrolled like that sometimes. |
|
|
And for everyone talking about pressing the middle
button and moving the cursor, that's called autoscroll.
Now you can look it up. |
|
| |