ddccontrol
mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-userspace
ddccontrol | mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-userspace | |
---|---|---|
16 | 13 | |
569 | 129 | |
0.4% | - | |
6.1 | 4.3 | |
3 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
C | Python | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
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ddccontrol
- Scrollbars Are Becoming a Problem
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Why can't windows and macos adjust monitor brightness natively via dDC?
Why do they not allow doing the same for external monitors using DDC? There are several apps that do just that.
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How can I turn my main monitor off? Already have a dummy plug.
Try ddccontrol on Linux or https://www.nirsoft.net/utils/control_my_monitor.html on Windows.
- Sysadmins that work in Visualization: can you please recommend a high-end KVM switch that does 4k and above at 120Hz or more? twin-view
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How do I get a slider for brightness control?
ddccontrol and gddcontrol works well
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Making the "xrandr --setmonitor" setting permanent
If I were you, I would take a look at ddccontrol. It's a utility that allows you to query the state and send commands to your monitor via the command line. I currently use it to increase / decrease the brightness of my monitor depending on the time of day.
- PSA: You can control your desktop monitor's brightness via Linux with this driver
- Ask HN: Monitor with physical dials for brightness/contrast?
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every want to change your monitor settings from the command line
i have always hated having to fiddle with the buttons on the back of my monitor to change things such as the brightness but now i have finally found a better way https://github.com/ddccontrol/ddccontrol
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Automatic Desktop Monitor Brightness Adjustment
Before I look into automating it, I wanted to get it working first. For this, I have a tool called ddccontrol (https://github.com/ddccontrol/ddccontrol). But this needs root privileges. So I'm just wondering if there are other ways, since I couldn't find any.
mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-userspace
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Linux Touchpad Like MacBook Update: 2023 Progress on Smooth Scrolling
If you want to have mouse scroll wheel acceleration, you might be interested in a small project of mine: https://github.com/albertz/mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-u...
I'm using this all the time on non-Mac platforms. Once you get used to this, it's hard to get back.
But I'm still waiting that such a feature gets more built into the core, e.g. libinput or so.
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Scrollbars Are Becoming a Problem
Regarding quickly scrolling around in a large document, there is also scroll wheel acceleration, i.e. the users finger scroll speed is not just a linear function mapped onto the software scroll speed but rather it can accelerate.
MacOS, iOS and Android have this anyway, and a few custom software as well.
I implemented a cross platform user-space variant of this, to get mouse scroll wheel acceleration. You can even use this in addition to the native scroll wheel acceleration on MacOS.
https://github.com/albertz/mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-u...
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how do i make the touchpad not garbage on a macbook pro running ubuntu
Turn on adaptive acceleration. Enable gestures. Look into this project that ports macOS-style scrolling acceleration to X11 and Wayland: https://github.com/albertz/mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-userspace
- Mouse scroll wheel acceleration, implemented in user space
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Show HN: iPod Clickwheel.js
I never had an iPod, but I wonder, did it use some acceleration scheme? I.e. your physical scroll speed was not just linearly mapped to the virtual scroll speed but some quadratic or even exponential scheme?
Because I know that they do the same on OSX for scrolling, i.e. scrolling has an acceleration scheme, which I very much enjoy, and always miss when I'm on other operating systems.
For that reason, I implemented such scroll acceleration in user space. Some further details and references are in the README. https://github.com/albertz/mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-u...
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Having a really hard time switching to Linux...
Workaround: https://github.com/albertz/mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-userspace. Enables inertia in Chromium and Qt apps, but breaks it in GTK apps (fun!).
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So as I was browsing Google and KDE's Reddit community, I found out that lots of users having problems with annoyingly slow scrolling speed in KDE, or other Linux-Based OS. So I decided to make a quick guide on how to fix that:D Hope you will find this guide helpful!
Good video, but I find https://github.com/albertz/mouse-scroll-wheel-acceleration-userspace a much better solution.
What are some alternatives?
ddcctl - DDC monitor controls (brightness) for Mac OSX command line
touchegg - Linux multi-touch gesture recognizer
ddcci-driver-linux
egl-wayland - The EGLStream-based Wayland external platform
redshift - Redshift adjusts the color temperature of your screen according to your surroundings. This may help your eyes hurt less if you are working in front of the screen at night.
ibus-typing-booster - ibus-typing-booster is a completion input method for faster typing
ddcutil - Control monitor settings using DDC/CI and USB
clickwheel-js
display-switch - Turn a $30 USB switch into a full-featured multi-monitor KVM switch
Joplin - Joplin - the secure note taking and to-do app with synchronisation capabilities for Windows, macOS, Linux, Android and iOS.
twinkle-tray - Easily manage the brightness of your monitors in Windows from the system tray
ipod-classic-js - An iPod Classic emulator that connects to Apple Music and Spotify. Built with React & Styled Components