![]() ![]() ![]() The first tab of this screen provides three options. This will bring up the “Mouse Properties” popup which hasn’t changed much through generations of the Windows operating system. You can access them with the “Additional mouse options” link to the right of the Mouse settings page. The rest of Windows’ mouse settings are tucked away in the Control Panel. You’ll probably want to keep it enabled most of the time. You don’t need to switch focus to the window first, addressing a long-standing complaint with previous versions of Windows. Per the description, it lets you scroll the contents of any window on your desktop by hovering over it and using the mouse wheel. The last toggle button on the page, “Scroll inactive windows when I hover over them,” is the only mouse setting not available in the Control Panel. The mouse wheel can be made to scroll through lines or entire screens (as if you pressed the Page Up/Page Down buttons), and you can customise how many lines or screens should be scrolled at once. The page lets you customise the scroll wheel’s operation and change which mouse button acts as the primary one. We’ll head to Settings first, so open the app (Win+I keyboard shortcut), click the “Devices” category and then navigate to the “Mouse” page from the menu. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |