I've enabled natural scrolling via Ubuntu Tweak's miscellaneous options, but that doesn't seem to take effect for horizontal scroll, neither in web browsers, nor in nautilus or other native applications.
Is there any way to enforce this behavior on horizontal scrolling as well?
I've enabled natural scrolling via Ubuntu Tweak's miscellaneous options, but that doesn't seem to take affect for horizontal scrolls neither in web browsers, nor in nautilus or other native applications.
Is there any way to enforce this behavior on horizontal scrolls as well?
There is no option in Mouse & Touchpad Settings to enable horizontal scrolling in Ubuntu 13.04 daily buils by now:
No horizontal scrolling even by enabling two finger scroll or content sticks to fingers.
How is it possible?
i want scroll grid in horizontal direction in android can anyone plz help out to scroll the grid in horizonal view. I have used the scrollbar property in grid but it didnt worked for scrolling grid in horizontal.i have also used the horizontal scroll inside which i have placed grid but that also didnt worked.Thanks in advance if any help:confused:
i want scroll grid in horizontal direction in android can anyone plz help out to scroll the grid in horizonal view. I have used the scrollbar property in grid but it didnt worked for scrolling grid in horizontal.i have also used the horizontal scroll inside which i have placed grid but that also didnt worked.Thanks in advance if any help:confused:
Out of the box, this Logitech M325 mouse works great with one issue: cannot use the scroll wheel for horizontal scrolling. It acts as forward or back in the browsers or does nothing in other windows.
Hello,
I am trying a trust expert touch mouse at the moment, a mouse with a toch surface on top instead of buttons. It is supported very well out of the box, even the two finger gestures work as forward and back in firefox. But the mouse has a very poor horizontal scrolling, it works very slow.
I found out I could invert my trackpad scrolling, so as to work more like the OS X "natural scrolling", which I liked better.
To do that, I run the following command on startup:
xinput set-button-map 11 1 2 3 5 4 7 6
Where 11 is the touchpad id (found with xinput list and xinput test 11).
This is the way that Mac OS scrolling with a boring old handheld mouse works (as opposed to fancy soap bar and multitouch mice): The more and the faster you scroll, the further the mouse scrolling goes.
For instance, if I scroll one little tick on the mouse, the window scrolls a tiny amount.