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84 lines
4.0 KiB
84 lines
4.0 KiB
MouseTool is a program that clicks the mouse for you.
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I designed it to help relieve the pain that clicking mouse buttons can cause.
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For more information, see www.mousetool.com
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How To Use MouseTool
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1 It's simple: MouseTool watches as you move the mouse. When you stop, it clicks.
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2 Practice with this. When you are comfortable with it, move on to Smart Drag.
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3 When Smart Drag is enabled, MouseTool pauses after it clicks down. If you
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move the mouse, it waits until you stop moving before it clicks up.
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This takes more practice, but if I can learn to do it without thinking, so can you.
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4 KMouseTool 1.1 supports strokes. When you enable strokes, a slow move to the
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right and back, followed by a pause, will generate a right-click. A slow move
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left and back will generate a double click. (Strokes are specified in
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~/.trinity/share/config/kmousetool_strokes.txt. This file is generated by KMouseTool
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the first time it is run, but can be modified afterwards.)
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MouseTool Options:
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* Checkboxes:
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Smart Drag -- enables or disables Smart Drag. Disabled is easier, so this is default.
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Audible Click -- plays a sound when MouseTool clicks down. This helps, especially
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with Smart Drag, but as of version 0.8, the latency is too high.
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By the time you hear the click, you're doing something else.
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This will be fixed in the next version.
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Start with KDE -- When this is enabled, MouseTool will start each time KDE starts.
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Enable Strokes -- When this is enabled, you can generate right- or double-clicks
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using mouse strokes.
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* Times
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Dwell Time -- The time you have to pause before MouseTool clicks.
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Drag Time -- (When Smart Drag is enabled) the time MouseTool waits, after it clicks
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down, before it clicks back up if you don't move the mouse.
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Apply Times Button -- After changing either time, you must click this button.
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* Start Button -- Starts MouseTool. (Well, duh.)
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When it says "stop", clicking it will stop MouseTool. (Duh, again.)
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* command line -- MouseTool has no command line options.
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It does remembers its state when it is restarted, though.
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* Hotkeys -- None yet (as of version 1.1). They are very useful, though, and may be added.
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Credit:
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The idea for MouseTool came to me when I was thinking about head-tracking
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systems that allow you to move a cursor using your head orientation, and then
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send clicks when you pause. As far as I know, I was the first person to use
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this technique with an ordinary mouse, but it is quite possible that I am wrong
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about that. There are now other programs available for Windows and Macs that
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do this; I know that some were developed after MouseTool, but it is likely
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others came before.
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If you know of another Linux- or Unix-based program that does this, please let
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me know (at jeff@mousetool.com)
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The clever idea for Smart Drag was suggested by Joe Betts. Thanks, Joe!
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Other ideas in MouseTool for Windows that I hope to port to KDE were either
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suggested by MouseTool users or came out of email discussions with users.
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Bugs and issues:
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Emacs - Smart Drag and Emacs menus don't mix well; the menus don't stay visible
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long enough to use. XEmacs seems to work fine. Gvim also works well.
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Taskbar - When you drag the taskbar using Smart Drag in KDE 2.x, kmousetool won't release
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the drag. This can be scary if you're not expecting it, but simply clicking
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the mouse button manually fixes the problem. KDE 3.x does not have this problem.
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This seems to be an issue with the internals of KDE or QT code, and similar
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things happen in Windows. I haven't looked into it much under KDE, but on
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Windows it happens when mousetool's timer stops while Windows waits for an
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upclick, and the upclick never happens because the timer is stopped;
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I'm sure the same thing is happening under KDE.
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