| 1 | MOUSE ACCELERATION IS A REAL PROBLEM IN LINUX. \r |
| 2 | \r |
| 3 | [linux_gaming] 2018-10-09_16-00\r |
| 4 | \r |
| 5 | o Reference: 2018-10-09_16-00_Mouse_acceleration_is_a\r |
| 6 | o News link: https://www.reddit.com/r/linux_gaming/comments/9lfqhh/mouse_acceleration_is_a_real_problem_in_linux/\r |
| 7 | o Source link: \r |
| 8 | \r |
| 9 | \r |
| 10 | All Linux distributions I have used required me to tweak the\r |
| 11 | mouse settings before it was usable for gaming.\r |
| 12 | \r |
| 13 | Stock Ubuntu for example comes with mouse acceleration enabled\r |
| 14 | by default and there is no option to turn it off. WTF?\r |
| 15 | \r |
| 16 | Even on touchpads mouse acceleration feels like its doing more\r |
| 17 | harm than good and I dont like it :(\r |
| 18 | \r |
| 19 | edit: Instead of giving me gold please donate the money to a\r |
| 20 | charity or GNU developers.\r |
| 21 | \r |
| 22 | \r |
| 23 | ** TurnDownForTendies\r |
| 24 | Despite the downvotes this is a legitimate complaint. I've never\r |
| 25 | understood why this isn't extremely easy to disable.\r |
| 26 | \r |
| 27 | ** KarKraKr\r |
| 28 | There even was a time when libinput didn't support flat\r |
| 29 | acceleration at all while some distros (namely arch) had\r |
| 30 | already moved to it. I downgraded that package immediately.\r |
| 31 | If I remember correctly the devs were quite dismissive of\r |
| 32 | this and didn't think it was a high priority, because who\r |
| 33 | doesn't want mouse acceleration? And isn't setting it to some\r |
| 34 | really low value just like turning it off?\r |
| 35 | No, it's not and yes I notice it immediately. I refuse to buy\r |
| 36 | many mice because they can't track without some leftover\r |
| 37 | acceleration ffs. With Linux being more and more viable as a\r |
| 38 | gaming platform this just can't be ignored. I know people who\r |
| 39 | tried switching to Linux because they heard CSGO, the only\r |
| 40 | game they ever play, runs. They were just as stupefied as\r |
| 41 | you'd expect them to be that there was no option for\r |
| 42 | disabling mouse acceleration completely and that they had to\r |
| 43 | manually edit config files. "Yeah, Linux is really easy these\r |
| 44 | days, uhh, except for that I guess"\r |
| 45 | \r |
| 46 | \r |
| 47 | ** 5had0w5talk3r\r |
| 48 | If you use Gnome or especially KDE, it is extremely easy to\r |
| 49 | disable. Just go to the settings menu and disable it.\r |
| 50 | \r |
| 51 | ** aaronfranke\r |
| 52 | In XFCE there's a menu for changing the acceleration\r |
| 53 | amount, but it doesn't do anything if I set it to zero or\r |
| 54 | ten.\r |
| 55 | \r |
| 56 | ** 5had0w5talk3r\r |
| 57 | [1]https://bugzilla.xfce.org/\r |
| 58 | \r |
| 59 | \r |
| 60 | \r |
| 61 | \r |
| 62 | [1] https://bugzilla.xfce.org/\r |
| 63 | \r |
| 64 | ** aaronfranke\r |
| 65 | [1]https://bugzilla.xfce.org/show_bug.cgi?id=8593\r |
| 66 | [2]https://bugzilla.xfce.org/show_bug.cgi?id=12140\r |
| 67 | No attention from developers for over half a decade.\r |
| 68 | \r |
| 69 | \r |
| 70 | \r |
| 71 | \r |
| 72 | [1] https://bugzilla.xfce.org/show_bug.cgi?id=8593\r |
| 73 | [2] https://bugzilla.xfce.org/show_bug.cgi?id=12140\r |
| 74 | \r |
| 75 | ** 5had0w5talk3r\r |
| 76 | That's pretty shocking. If you're not resource\r |
| 77 | limited, I'd consider moving to KDE since they\r |
| 78 | actually seem to care about what the users want\r |
| 79 | and need.\r |
| 80 | \r |
| 81 | ** aaronfranke\r |
| 82 | Not shocking to me. Ubuntu and Wine both have\r |
| 83 | bugs over a decade old. I just checked and KDE\r |
| 84 | has open bugs from 2002. Tends to happen with\r |
| 85 | open-source projects. [1]The oldest 500 bugs\r |
| 86 | are from 2002 to 2005 .\r |
| 87 | XFCE's oldest bug is from 2006. Gnome's oldest\r |
| 88 | bug is from 2004. The Linux kernel's oldest\r |
| 89 | bug is from 2005. Wine's oldest bug is from\r |
| 90 | 2000.\r |
| 91 | \r |
| 92 | \r |
| 93 | \r |
| 94 | \r |
| 95 | [1]\r |
| 96 | https://bugs.kde.org/buglist.cgi?bug_status=__-\r |
| 97 | open__&no_redirect=1&order=changeddate%2Cprior-\r |
| 98 | ity%2Cbug_severity&query_format=specific\r |
| 99 | \r |
| 100 | ** 5had0w5talk3r\r |
| 101 | It's shocking considering the kind of bug\r |
| 102 | it is.\r |
| 103 | \r |
| 104 | \r |
| 105 | ** Greydmiyu\r |
| 106 | Most might not be valid any longer. I was\r |
| 107 | putzing around with Dokuwiki at work, it\r |
| 108 | didn't install cleanly from the package. So\r |
| 109 | I checked the bugtracker for the package.\r |
| 110 | Oldest bug for Dokuwiki is filed against\r |
| 111 | 8.10. That version isn't even supported any\r |
| 112 | more (16.04LTS is the oldest, I think). On\r |
| 113 | top of that the specific bug is fixed. I\r |
| 114 | know it's fixed. The current package isn't\r |
| 115 | missing the symlink that bug says is\r |
| 116 | missing.\r |
| 117 | \r |
| 118 | \r |
| 119 | ** energybeing\r |
| 120 | Tends to happen with open-source projects.\r |
| 121 | Tends to happen more with closed source\r |
| 122 | projects as there is no way to report or\r |
| 123 | track bugs open to the public. Windows 7\r |
| 124 | was still running 16 bit dos... Think about\r |
| 125 | how old the bugs must be in that pile of\r |
| 126 | trash.\r |
| 127 | One of them led to a full privilege\r |
| 128 | escalation.\r |
| 129 | \r |
| 130 | \r |
| 131 | ** the_Madman\r |
| 132 | That's an issue with bug triaging, not bug\r |
| 133 | fixing.\r |
| 134 | \r |
| 135 | ** aaronfranke\r |
| 136 | The user doesn't care though.\r |
| 137 | \r |
| 138 | ** the_Madman\r |
| 139 | That's correct. They don't care about\r |
| 140 | bug reports against software that\r |
| 141 | doesn't have the bug anymore.\r |
| 142 | \r |
| 143 | \r |
| 144 | \r |
| 145 | \r |
| 146 | \r |
| 147 | \r |
| 148 | \r |
| 149 | \r |
| 150 | ** hatestetris\r |
| 151 | Same issue on MATE.\r |
| 152 | \r |
| 153 | \r |
| 154 | \r |
| 155 | ** TurnDownForTendies\r |
| 156 | I made a bootable usb to see the mouse options in KDE.\r |
| 157 | You're right there's an option to set the acceleration to\r |
| 158 | flat. The last time I used it I was confused by the\r |
| 159 | multipliers where you could type in values for\r |
| 160 | acceleration and "pointer threshold." Good to see its now\r |
| 161 | just a click to get it over with.\r |
| 162 | \r |
| 163 | ** 5had0w5talk3r\r |
| 164 | Yeah, the KDE team have done a great job recently and\r |
| 165 | have developed a modern, feature-rich, and great\r |
| 166 | performing desktop with some of the best apps in the\r |
| 167 | Linux space. It's really come a long way and I have\r |
| 168 | zero regrets or complaints after having switched to it\r |
| 169 | over a year ago.\r |
| 170 | \r |
| 171 | ** TurnDownForTendies\r |
| 172 | Yeah looks a lot different than it used to last time\r |
| 173 | I tried it a year ago. Looks really nice so far and\r |
| 174 | animations are a lot smoother than what I'm used to\r |
| 175 | on gnome. I had to edit a file to stop screen\r |
| 176 | tearing on my nvidia card and disallow applications\r |
| 177 | to block compositing because running a game would\r |
| 178 | cause window dragging and some desktop effects to\r |
| 179 | get screwed up, but I'll switch to it if things seem\r |
| 180 | stable.\r |
| 181 | \r |
| 182 | ** 5had0w5talk3r\r |
| 183 | I had to edit a file to stop screen tearing on my\r |
| 184 | nvidia card\r |
| 185 | On any recent drivers you can just open the\r |
| 186 | nvidia-settings tool as root and enable\r |
| 187 | "ForceFullCompositePipeline" under "Advanced" in\r |
| 188 | the "X Server Display Configuration". Then just\r |
| 189 | save it to your xorg.conf file to keep it after a\r |
| 190 | reboot.\r |
| 191 | \r |
| 192 | disallow applications to block compositing\r |
| 193 | because running a game would cause window\r |
| 194 | dragging and some desktop effects to get screwed\r |
| 195 | up,\r |
| 196 | This seems to be an edge-case with only certain\r |
| 197 | applications. IIRC, the only one I've encountered\r |
| 198 | any issues with was [1]The Adventures of Fei\r |
| 199 | Duanmu . In any case, you can manually toggle\r |
| 200 | compositing using a global shortcut\r |
| 201 | (Shift+Alt+F12 by default).\r |
| 202 | \r |
| 203 | Looks really nice so far and animations are a lot\r |
| 204 | smoother than what I'm used to on gnome.\r |
| 205 | Yeah the animations and transitions are great.\r |
| 206 | You can customize them too, from "Smoother and\r |
| 207 | longer" to "Snappier and shorter" (or just turn\r |
| 208 | them off if that's your thing).\r |
| 209 | \r |
| 210 | \r |
| 211 | \r |
| 212 | \r |
| 213 | [1]\r |
| 214 | https://store.steampowered.com/app/593200/The_Adv-\r |
| 215 | entures_of_Fei_Duanmu/\r |
| 216 | \r |
| 217 | ** DutchHawk_\r |
| 218 | I had to edit a file to stop screen tearing on\r |
| 219 | my nvidia card\r |
| 220 | On any recent drivers you can just open the\r |
| 221 | nvidia-settings tool as root and enable\r |
| 222 | "ForceFullCompositePipeline" under "Advanced"\r |
| 223 | in the "X Server Display Configuration". Then\r |
| 224 | just save it to your xorg.conf file to keep it\r |
| 225 | after a reboot.\r |
| 226 | Seeing as how we are on a gaming subreddit:\r |
| 227 | keep in mind that this does have a huge\r |
| 228 | performance impact.\r |
| 229 | \r |
| 230 | ** 5had0w5talk3r\r |
| 231 | I feel like this is a myth that keeps\r |
| 232 | getting perpetuated. I've done testing and\r |
| 233 | have seen no impact in either frame-time,\r |
| 234 | response, or frame-rate across OpenGL,\r |
| 235 | Vulkan or Wine games. Maybe it causes some\r |
| 236 | issue in some edge-case game where the code\r |
| 237 | is poorly optimized, but I've yet to run\r |
| 238 | into it.\r |
| 239 | \r |
| 240 | ** DutchHawk_\r |
| 241 | Dunno about edge case, but it isn't\r |
| 242 | consistent: that's true.\r |
| 243 | I have little impact in say\r |
| 244 | Insurgency/DOF, but both Tomb Raiders\r |
| 245 | had massive stuttering. Same with the\r |
| 246 | vsync effect: sometimes it seems to\r |
| 247 | clamp it to 60fps while other games are\r |
| 248 | fine.\r |
| 249 | So I guess the advice would more be\r |
| 250 | "keep in mind it does stuff; if you have\r |
| 251 | issues try enabling/disabling it".\r |
| 252 | \r |
| 253 | \r |
| 254 | \r |
| 255 | ** GaianNeuron\r |
| 256 | There's an option in KDE called "allow\r |
| 257 | applications to block compositing" which\r |
| 258 | lets games override that and recover said\r |
| 259 | performance.\r |
| 260 | It's enabled by default.\r |
| 261 | \r |
| 262 | ** DutchHawk_\r |
| 263 | From what I gather, that has nothing to\r |
| 264 | do with Nvidia's settings (inc. any form\r |
| 265 | of CompositePipeline ) only KDE's own\r |
| 266 | compositing. KWin doesn't know anything\r |
| 267 | what Nvidia is doing. Via former KDE dev\r |
| 268 | [1]/u/mgraesslin : see [2]this\r |
| 269 | The [3]solution in that thread by\r |
| 270 | [4]/u/UrbenLegend may work with the\r |
| 271 | "block compositing" (since it it a KWin\r |
| 272 | thingy after all). Although for me the\r |
| 273 | triple buffer helps, but not completely\r |
| 274 | eliminates tearing.\r |
| 275 | \r |
| 276 | \r |
| 277 | \r |
| 278 | \r |
| 279 | [1] https://www.reddit.com/u/mgraesslin\r |
| 280 | [2]\r |
| 281 | https://www.reddit.com/r/kde/comments/88-\r |
| 282 | aejd/is_anyone_here_using_kde_on_proprie-\r |
| 283 | tary_nvidia/dwow79l\r |
| 284 | [3]\r |
| 285 | https://www.reddit.com/r/kde/comments/88-\r |
| 286 | aejd/is_anyone_here_using_kde_on_proprie-\r |
| 287 | tary_nvidia/dwje571\r |
| 288 | [4] https://www.reddit.com/u/UrbenLegend\r |
| 289 | \r |
| 290 | \r |
| 291 | \r |
| 292 | \r |
| 293 | \r |
| 294 | \r |
| 295 | ** koera\r |
| 296 | My only complaint is that I would love to use\r |
| 297 | Kubuntu, but KDE Neon keeps getting so much awesome\r |
| 298 | stuff I can't make myself give it up.\r |
| 299 | \r |
| 300 | ** YAOMTC\r |
| 301 | I don't see how this is a complaint.\r |
| 302 | \r |
| 303 | ** koera\r |
| 304 | Luxury problem, I would love to have a super\r |
| 305 | stabil 18.04 with the extra polish and stabil\r |
| 306 | KDE desktop, but all the awesome new and shiny\r |
| 307 | is too much to resist.\r |
| 308 | \r |
| 309 | \r |
| 310 | \r |
| 311 | \r |
| 312 | \r |
| 313 | \r |
| 314 | ** fluffy465\r |
| 315 | KDE has different mouse settings menus depending on the\r |
| 316 | driver, so that option isn't always there. It wasn't for\r |
| 317 | me by default.\r |
| 318 | \r |
| 319 | ** Walrad_Usingen\r |
| 320 | Yes! [1]Here is a forum post showing the different\r |
| 321 | mouse settings in the preferences. Make sure you\r |
| 322 | install xf86-input-evdev and use it instead of the\r |
| 323 | default xf86-input-libinput , e.g. with cp\r |
| 324 | /usr/share/X11/xorg.conf.d/10-evdev.conf\r |
| 325 | /etc/X11/xorg.conf.d/10-evdev.conf\r |
| 326 | \r |
| 327 | \r |
| 328 | \r |
| 329 | \r |
| 330 | [1] https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=240218\r |
| 331 | \r |
| 332 | ** the_real_farfetchd\r |
| 333 | Maybe symlink the file instead of copying so it\r |
| 334 | doesn't get out of sync when the original gets\r |
| 335 | updated.\r |
| 336 | \r |
| 337 | ** Walrad_Usingen\r |
| 338 | Yeah, probably not a bad idea. I don't\r |
| 339 | necessarily trust the package keeping it in the\r |
| 340 | same place either though, so maybe both. 🤔\r |
| 341 | \r |
| 342 | \r |
| 343 | \r |
| 344 | \r |
| 345 | ** 5had0w5talk3r\r |
| 346 | When was this? It's there on the default configuration\r |
| 347 | for: Fedora 28, Arch (and Arch-based), Kubuntu 18.04,\r |
| 348 | KDE Neon.\r |
| 349 | \r |
| 350 | \r |
| 351 | \r |
| 352 | ** Jupon\r |
| 353 | wait, with KDE i can completely disable this? im\r |
| 354 | installing this weekend!\r |
| 355 | \r |
| 356 | \r |
| 357 | \r |
| 358 | ** Swiftpaw22\r |
| 359 | It is, and it's why I helped to get the Linux Mint developers\r |
| 360 | to turn it off by default. There is an option in mouse\r |
| 361 | settings for "custom acceleration" where you can turn it back\r |
| 362 | on, though, if you want it. But seriously, most everyone\r |
| 363 | seems to prefer it off, hence why they changed that. It's\r |
| 364 | stupid to have accel be the default, and even if you make it\r |
| 365 | the default, at least provide a way to easily disable it.\r |
| 366 | All distros should do the same. No mouse acceleration is a\r |
| 367 | sane default.\r |
| 368 | \r |
| 369 | ** Jupon\r |
| 370 | When was this? i was using mint earlier this year and it\r |
| 371 | was impossible for someone like me to remove.\r |
| 372 | \r |
| 373 | \r |
| 374 | ** chunes\r |
| 375 | As someone who moved from Windows to Mint a few weeks ago,\r |
| 376 | thank you! This thread had me worried but I was surprised\r |
| 377 | to see it turned off by default.\r |
| 378 | \r |
| 379 | ** TheFlyingDharma\r |
| 380 | Disabling mouse acceleration is a "massively niche\r |
| 381 | feature"? Did I really just read that on a gaming\r |
| 382 | subreddit?\r |
| 383 | \r |
| 384 | ** c0ccuh\r |
| 385 | He would feel right at home on gnome.\r |
| 386 | \r |
| 387 | ** vexorian2\r |
| 388 | Not a he\r |
| 389 | \r |
| 390 | \r |
| 391 | \r |
| 392 | ** vexorian2\r |
| 393 | I am yet to meet anyone IRL that remotely cares\r |
| 394 | about this. And most of the people I know are geeks\r |
| 395 | to some degree.\r |
| 396 | Reality is that most of the people don't care, and\r |
| 397 | if we added this feature to the UI they would feel\r |
| 398 | confused about it and mess it up and then wonder why\r |
| 399 | their mouse is acting glitchy on Linux.\r |
| 400 | If instead, we leave it like it is, the people who\r |
| 401 | care can run the terminal commands or install the\r |
| 402 | right packages or whatever.\r |
| 403 | \r |
| 404 | \r |
| 405 | \r |
| 406 | \r |
| 407 | \r |
| 408 | ** catman1900\r |
| 409 | The people here are to 1337 for ease of use stuff\r |
| 410 | \r |
| 411 | \r |
| 412 | ** lemler3\r |
| 413 | Install gnome tweak tool go to keyboard and mouse and change\r |
| 414 | mouse profile to flat\r |
| 415 | \r |
| 416 | ** Sempre01\r |
| 417 | Yeah thats the solution on stock Ubuntu but you shouldnt have\r |
| 418 | to install software to change mouse settings...\r |
| 419 | \r |
| 420 | ** redstoolthrowawayy\r |
| 421 | Actually the function is already part of gnome, the tweak\r |
| 422 | tool makes it easier to access and saves the setting.\r |
| 423 | \r |
| 424 | ** Sempre01\r |
| 425 | Huh. I had to install it when I tried stock Ubuntu.\r |
| 426 | \r |
| 427 | ** furquan_ahmad\r |
| 428 | Debian (on which Ubuntu is based upon) installs it\r |
| 429 | as part of the gnome metapackage, I don't know why\r |
| 430 | Ubuntu removed Tweaks from the metapackage.\r |
| 431 | \r |
| 432 | ** koera\r |
| 433 | My guess would be to "simplify" the experience.\r |
| 434 | Less options means easier to use.\r |
| 435 | \r |
| 436 | \r |
| 437 | \r |
| 438 | ** ImpersonalComputer\r |
| 439 | You had to install gnome tweak tool to change the\r |
| 440 | setting using a GUI but you could have changed it\r |
| 441 | manually by editing dconf.\r |
| 442 | \r |
| 443 | ** TMiguelT\r |
| 444 | Any idea why tweak tool is not installed by\r |
| 445 | default, or even integrated into the Settings\r |
| 446 | dialogue? It's so helpful I don't understand why\r |
| 447 | everyone wouldn't want it\r |
| 448 | \r |
| 449 | ** the_Madman\r |
| 450 | Because that gives users control, which is\r |
| 451 | against the Gnome philosophy.\r |
| 452 | \r |
| 453 | ** Vash63\r |
| 454 | Gnome doesn't decide on the default\r |
| 455 | packages for a distribution. As mentioned\r |
| 456 | above in this same comment thread, Ubuntu's\r |
| 457 | upstream (Debian) does include Tweaks by\r |
| 458 | default with the 'gnome' metapackage.\r |
| 459 | \r |
| 460 | ** the_Madman\r |
| 461 | Gnome does decide to ship 4 different\r |
| 462 | UIs to do one job, and all as separate\r |
| 463 | software.\r |
| 464 | \r |
| 465 | ** Vash63\r |
| 466 | True, but that isn't the same thing\r |
| 467 | you initially said which is that they\r |
| 468 | don't like giving control. They just\r |
| 469 | aren't organizing it very well.\r |
| 470 | \r |
| 471 | \r |
| 472 | \r |
| 473 | \r |
| 474 | \r |
| 475 | \r |
| 476 | ** lordofbud\r |
| 477 | I think the point they are making is that it's\r |
| 478 | not a default GUI option, people who are just\r |
| 479 | switching over from windows, and doing so as\r |
| 480 | gamers are likely not familiar with non-GUI\r |
| 481 | methods of adjusting settings.\r |
| 482 | [1]This is what they see on Ubuntu, and to be\r |
| 483 | honest, it leaves the impression to a new user\r |
| 484 | that disabling mouse acceleration is not an\r |
| 485 | option.\r |
| 486 | Edit: two words.\r |
| 487 | \r |
| 488 | \r |
| 489 | \r |
| 490 | \r |
| 491 | [1] https://imgur.com/xD5rIqI\r |
| 492 | \r |
| 493 | ** ImpersonalComputer\r |
| 494 | I agree, it should be a part of Ubuntu’s basic\r |
| 495 | features I was just trying to clarify that it\r |
| 496 | can be done without installing the gnome tweak\r |
| 497 | tools package.\r |
| 498 | \r |
| 499 | \r |
| 500 | \r |
| 501 | \r |
| 502 | \r |
| 503 | \r |
| 504 | ** lemler3\r |
| 505 | I mean you can't really blame one distro when they all use\r |
| 506 | libinput, if anything synapse if the one to blame\r |
| 507 | \r |
| 508 | ** Sempre01\r |
| 509 | They could've put a slider in their mouse settings\r |
| 510 | couldnt they?\r |
| 511 | \r |
| 512 | ** BulletDust\r |
| 513 | Microsoft could have used just the 'Control Panel'\r |
| 514 | as opposed to the 'Control Panel' and the 'Settings\r |
| 515 | Panel' couldn't they?\r |
| 516 | A classic example of a non intuitive GUI if I ever\r |
| 517 | saw one. It's easier opening a configuration file\r |
| 518 | and copy/pasting simple text.\r |
| 519 | \r |
| 520 | \r |
| 521 | \r |
| 522 | \r |
| 523 | ** FlukyS\r |
| 524 | Well they are shipping the Gnome settings manager with a\r |
| 525 | few tweaks. This is more of a Gnome problem than an Ubuntu\r |
| 526 | problem.\r |
| 527 | \r |
| 528 | \r |
| 529 | \r |
| 530 | ** DanBennett\r |
| 531 | OK, I had no idea that's what that did! Thank you for helping\r |
| 532 | OP and thus others. More like you, please! :-)\r |
| 533 | \r |
| 534 | \r |
| 535 | ** arminiusreturns\r |
| 536 | [1]https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Mouse_acceleration\r |
| 537 | \r |
| 538 | \r |
| 539 | \r |
| 540 | \r |
| 541 | [1] https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Mouse_acceleration\r |
| 542 | \r |
| 543 | ** ed_ed_ed_ed\r |
| 544 | [Something like this?] ( [1]https://imgur.com/xGmEY1A )\r |
| 545 | \r |
| 546 | \r |
| 547 | \r |
| 548 | \r |
| 549 | [1] https://imgur.com/xGmEY1A\r |
| 550 | \r |
| 551 | ** KarKraKr\r |
| 552 | Does that really turn it off though? I've never seen a GUI\r |
| 553 | that actually sets a [1]flat acceleration profile . Granted,\r |
| 554 | I don't use many GUIs, but stock distros were always lacking\r |
| 555 | such an option.\r |
| 556 | \r |
| 557 | \r |
| 558 | \r |
| 559 | \r |
| 560 | [1]\r |
| 561 | https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Mouse_acceleration#Disab-\r |
| 562 | ling_mouse_acceleration\r |
| 563 | \r |
| 564 | ** Ozymandias117\r |
| 565 | KDE at least appears to. [1]https://i.imgur.com/3pOG6uL.png\r |
| 566 | \r |
| 567 | \r |
| 568 | \r |
| 569 | \r |
| 570 | [1] https://i.imgur.com/3pOG6uL.png\r |
| 571 | \r |
| 572 | ** TaylorRoyal23\r |
| 573 | That doesn't seem to work perfectly. I've tested it a\r |
| 574 | bunch of times and it seems to still have a bit of\r |
| 575 | acceleration\r |
| 576 | \r |
| 577 | ** bakgwailo\r |
| 578 | Would be nice to file a bug report with your\r |
| 579 | findings.\r |
| 580 | \r |
| 581 | \r |
| 582 | ** Sasamus\r |
| 583 | The profile toggle doesn't seem to work, it does not\r |
| 584 | change the profile.\r |
| 585 | It seems to work for some though.\r |
| 586 | \r |
| 587 | \r |
| 588 | \r |
| 589 | \r |
| 590 | \r |
| 591 | ** Swiftpaw22\r |
| 592 | Then you haven't used Linux Mint, as I helped to get the\r |
| 593 | developers to turn it off by default. There is an option in\r |
| 594 | mouse settings for "custom acceleration" where you can turn it\r |
| 595 | back on, though, if you want it. But seriously, most everyone\r |
| 596 | seems to prefer it off, hence why they changed that.\r |
| 597 | All distros should do the same. No mouse acceleration is a sane\r |
| 598 | default.\r |
| 599 | \r |
| 600 | ** awe300\r |
| 601 | I fucking love Linux mint\r |
| 602 | \r |
| 603 | \r |
| 604 | ** jensreuterberg\r |
| 605 | Ok this may be the DUMBEST question - but I use the GUI option\r |
| 606 | in plasma to set flat acceleration rate - but then I do\r |
| 607 | \r |
| 608 | $ xinput list-props {1..50} 2>/dev/null | fgrep 'libinput Accel\r |
| 609 | Profile Enabled ('\r |
| 610 | And it claims acceleration is still on... (ie reads 1, 0 instead\r |
| 611 | of 0, 1)\r |
| 612 | Is it me just not getting it, or freaking out for nothing? If\r |
| 613 | not: Why?\r |
| 614 | EDIT: should be noted that I have a hard time checking\r |
| 615 | "manually" (ie testing going quick over the same space as you've\r |
| 616 | recently dragged it slowly to see if it goes "farther" when\r |
| 617 | moving fast) but my aim in CSGO "feels" shaky. Could be just me\r |
| 618 | stressing out and getting shaky aim due to that suspicion.\r |
| 619 | \r |
| 620 | ** AI221\r |
| 621 | best way to test is to set 2 heavy objects between your mouse\r |
| 622 | and move between them fast or slow. If your mouse doesn't\r |
| 623 | return to roughly the same spot you're good.(unless you've\r |
| 624 | got some $500 mouse it's not gonna be pixel-perfect)\r |
| 625 | \r |
| 626 | ** jensreuterberg\r |
| 627 | Thats the one I usually do (although not THAT heavy), will\r |
| 628 | do some more of it though just to calm my nerves - which\r |
| 629 | may just as well be what messes it up. CS is such a\r |
| 630 | "confidence game", and a small streak of losses really\r |
| 631 | makes you wonder and question etc etc...\r |
| 632 | \r |
| 633 | \r |
| 634 | \r |
| 635 | ** Sasamus\r |
| 636 | You are correct. The profile toggle does not work, at least\r |
| 637 | for some, the profile does not change.\r |
| 638 | \r |
| 639 | \r |
| 640 | ** K900_\r |
| 641 | KDE Plasma lets you disable mouse acceleration out of the box.\r |
| 642 | \r |
| 643 | ** iommu\r |
| 644 | Does it have an option for sensitivity yet? On 5.13 I could\r |
| 645 | only find accel but not sensitivity.\r |
| 646 | \r |
| 647 | ** AimlesslyWalking\r |
| 648 | I think the acceleration option might just be a poorly\r |
| 649 | worded sensitivity option, so long as you set it to flat\r |
| 650 | profile underneath. I could be wrong though, just going\r |
| 651 | off a brief mouse-feel test and it feels unaccelerated.\r |
| 652 | \r |
| 653 | ** RASQ37\r |
| 654 | Just tested it. No, it's definitely acceleration.\r |
| 655 | \r |
| 656 | ** Sasamus\r |
| 657 | That slider does work as a sensitivity/speed slider\r |
| 658 | with a flat profile.\r |
| 659 | The problem is that changing the profile there\r |
| 660 | doesn't seem to work for some people, hence why\r |
| 661 | people have different experiences.\r |
| 662 | If you set the profile to flat by other means that\r |
| 663 | slider can be used for sensitivity.\r |
| 664 | \r |
| 665 | \r |
| 666 | \r |
| 667 | \r |
| 668 | \r |
| 669 | ** raist356\r |
| 670 | I guess you are using the stable version. That option is gone\r |
| 671 | in the settings of new versions.\r |
| 672 | \r |
| 673 | ** K900_\r |
| 674 | It's there for me on Plasma 5.14 beta.\r |
| 675 | \r |
| 676 | ** raist356\r |
| 677 | What distro are you on?\r |
| 678 | \r |
| 679 | ** K900_\r |
| 680 | Arch.\r |
| 681 | \r |
| 682 | \r |
| 683 | \r |
| 684 | \r |
| 685 | ** jensreuterberg\r |
| 686 | Just chiming in that I still have that option in 5.13.5\r |
| 687 | (Flat Acceleration Rate checkbox underneath the slider)\r |
| 688 | \r |
| 689 | \r |
| 690 | \r |
| 691 | ** mightysilentsaint\r |
| 692 | is it weird that i have never faced the said problems for the\r |
| 693 | last 6 years of my life as a full time linux user?\r |
| 694 | \r |
| 695 | ** MikeFrett\r |
| 696 | I've never had these issues either.\r |
| 697 | \r |
| 698 | ** aerique\r |
| 699 | It's mostly what you're used to. In the past I did most of\r |
| 700 | my gaming on Windows, so Linux felt off and OS X was\r |
| 701 | awful.\r |
| 702 | Switched to Linux full-time a couple of months for gaming\r |
| 703 | (everything else I had been doing on Unix for ages\r |
| 704 | anyway), set my mouse settings to something that felt\r |
| 705 | nice[1] and no issues after one or two days.\r |
| 706 | [1] xset b off mouse 2/1 4\r |
| 707 | \r |
| 708 | \r |
| 709 | \r |
| 710 | ** plumkefan\r |
| 711 | Just to be a bit pedantic, this is not a Linux issue as it has\r |
| 712 | nothing to do with the kernel. It is really an issue with\r |
| 713 | whatever Desktop Environment(s) you are using.\r |
| 714 | Some DEs have this built into to their settings UI, some do not.\r |
| 715 | If there is a specific DE you love, but does not offer this,\r |
| 716 | propose it upstream and someone may add it in.\r |
| 717 | There are several options for persistently disabling\r |
| 718 | acceleration. The easiest that come to mind would be either\r |
| 719 | throwing an computer command in somewhere like .xprofile or\r |
| 720 | specifying your mouse parameters in an XOrg config file. If\r |
| 721 | using Gnome, there is always gnome-tweaks, as has been\r |
| 722 | mentioned.\r |
| 723 | From what I’ve read in this thread, it seems like half the\r |
| 724 | commenters are expecting that there should be some magic\r |
| 725 | software or standard UI element that is mandatory in every\r |
| 726 | distribution of Linux. It’s a bit silly to think that way as\r |
| 727 | everyone uses Linux in their own way and many of us don’t want\r |
| 728 | bloated garbage that we will never use (a UI element for a\r |
| 729 | setting that only needs to be touched once).\r |
| 730 | \r |
| 731 | ** kon14\r |
| 732 | Just to be a bit pedantic, this is not a Linux issue as it\r |
| 733 | has nothing to do with the kernel.\r |
| 734 | Just a reminder, but you do understand you've written this in\r |
| 735 | a sub called linux _gaming, right? Nobody cares at this\r |
| 736 | point, from a casual user's perspective, linux is just a\r |
| 737 | catch-all term for linux distros.\r |
| 738 | \r |
| 739 | The easiest that come to mind would be either throwing an\r |
| 740 | computer command in somewhere like .xprofile or specifying\r |
| 741 | your mouse parameters in an XOrg config file.\r |
| 742 | While I personally love config files, manually configuring\r |
| 743 | some settings can be intimidating for newcomers and it gets\r |
| 744 | even worse when you also have to setup multiple non-binary\r |
| 745 | vars that only accept specific values (ie dpi, sensitivity,\r |
| 746 | acceleration etc).\r |
| 747 | \r |
| 748 | It seems like half the commenters are expecting that there\r |
| 749 | should be some magic software or standard UI element that is\r |
| 750 | mandatory in every distribution of Linux ... many of us don’t\r |
| 751 | want bloated garbage that we will never use.\r |
| 752 | You're spot on regarding unnecessary cruft bloating a default\r |
| 753 | installation. However if a noob-friendly desktop-use distro\r |
| 754 | (or rather DE) already provides a basic mouse configuration\r |
| 755 | utility in its system settings I think it would really make\r |
| 756 | sense if they could merely add a couple of additional\r |
| 757 | elements to expose and configure stuff like this.\r |
| 758 | The thing is, not all peripherals can be supported through\r |
| 759 | the same utilities (at least not for stuff like dpi), but\r |
| 760 | thankfully bosic stuff like acceleration are merely handled\r |
| 761 | by libinput (and others).\r |
| 762 | On the other hand, libinput doesn't even expose proper\r |
| 763 | configuration files, so if you're on Wayland and your\r |
| 764 | compositor doesn't provide a tool to modify acceleration and\r |
| 765 | other parameters you're pretty much stuck with the default\r |
| 766 | settings!\r |
| 767 | \r |
| 768 | \r |
| 769 | ** redstoolthrowawayy\r |
| 770 | xset m 0 0\r |
| 771 | \r |
| 772 | ** KarKraKr\r |
| 773 | That does not disable mouse acceleration 100%.\r |
| 774 | \r |
| 775 | ** learn2dev\r |
| 776 | Fr? What does? I'm worried bc I play tf2 with raw input on\r |
| 777 | and xset m 0 0.\r |
| 778 | How can I make sure acceleration is off?\r |
| 779 | \r |
| 780 | \r |
| 781 | \r |
| 782 | ** Sempre01\r |
| 783 | Thats temporary.\r |
| 784 | \r |
| 785 | ** _____frost___\r |
| 786 | You can make commands execute at startup in several ways..\r |
| 787 | \r |
| 788 | ** Sempre01\r |
| 789 | Thats way too complicated for 99% of gamers coming from\r |
| 790 | Windows.\r |
| 791 | \r |
| 792 | ** BulletDust\r |
| 793 | Geez, I've done more complicated things just getting\r |
| 794 | games running the way they should under Windows.\r |
| 795 | I personally think you've set the bar a little low\r |
| 796 | considering the technical ability of most gamers. I\r |
| 797 | enjoy gaming and I had mouse acceleration disabled\r |
| 798 | permanently in seconds under Ubuntu MATE.\r |
| 799 | This procedure is far from difficult (I run 16.04):\r |
| 800 | [1]https://errorfixer.co/disable-mouse-acceleration-\r |
| 801 | ubuntu-16-04/\r |
| 802 | \r |
| 803 | \r |
| 804 | \r |
| 805 | \r |
| 806 | [1]\r |
| 807 | https://errorfixer.co/disable-mouse-acceleration-ubu-\r |
| 808 | ntu-16-04/\r |
| 809 | \r |
| 810 | ** Greydmiyu\r |
| 811 | I've hated mouse acceleration ever since it was\r |
| 812 | introduced. I've never had to "move the mouse\r |
| 813 | over half the table." Called tweaking sensitivity\r |
| 814 | for the available space. Right now the mouse I am\r |
| 815 | using for my laptop has less area than a standard\r |
| 816 | sized hot pad (7"x7"). I only use that as a unit\r |
| 817 | of measurement because my dinner is on a hot pad\r |
| 818 | next to the mouse and takes up more room than\r |
| 819 | what my mouse has to move.\r |
| 820 | \r |
| 821 | \r |
| 822 | ** TurbulentCurrent\r |
| 823 | I don't use acceleration and my mouse has to move\r |
| 824 | less than 4 cm for the pointer to move from one\r |
| 825 | corner to the diagonally opposite corner on a\r |
| 826 | 1080p screen.\r |
| 827 | \r |
| 828 | \r |
| 829 | ** lordofbud\r |
| 830 | 99% of user?\r |
| 831 | I have never heard someone praise mouse\r |
| 832 | acceleration, I have on the other hand heard\r |
| 833 | people bitch about it.\r |
| 834 | \r |
| 835 | \r |
| 836 | ** energybeing\r |
| 837 | You're literally the only person I've ever seen\r |
| 838 | defend mouse acceleration. I don't think that\r |
| 839 | number is as high as you think it is. That shit\r |
| 840 | is cancer. Just up the sensitivity a little bit\r |
| 841 | if you can't be bothered to move your hand a few\r |
| 842 | inches FFS.\r |
| 843 | \r |
| 844 | \r |
| 845 | \r |
| 846 | ** lulxD69420\r |
| 847 | Windows where you need a ton of 3rd party software,\r |
| 848 | registry editing to make the OS not spy and do weird\r |
| 849 | stuff randomly? Just wow\r |
| 850 | \r |
| 851 | ** Sempre01\r |
| 852 | Its not a good idea to make Linux easier to use\r |
| 853 | for everyone?\r |
| 854 | \r |
| 855 | ** biAlotOFthings\r |
| 856 | lol no. Gatekeeping gets these people off\r |
| 857 | bruh. Some of them absolutely do not want\r |
| 858 | things like this to be more accessible. God\r |
| 859 | forbid my 97 year old gramps can get anything\r |
| 860 | done on the ubuntu distro I installed on his\r |
| 861 | desktop.\r |
| 862 | Imagine this kind of neckbeardy attitude in\r |
| 863 | any other field of interest.\r |
| 864 | "My coq au vin recipe tastes too savory what\r |
| 865 | can I do??"\r |
| 866 | -- "Hurr durr maybe next time try yourself on\r |
| 867 | [1]this instead"\r |
| 868 | Fucking insufferable\r |
| 869 | \r |
| 870 | \r |
| 871 | \r |
| 872 | \r |
| 873 | [1]\r |
| 874 | https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thum-\r |
| 875 | b/5/57/Lunchables%2C_turkey_and_american_crack-\r |
| 876 | er_stackers.jpg/250px-Lunchables%2C_turkey_and-\r |
| 877 | _american_cracker_stackers.jpg\r |
| 878 | \r |
| 879 | ** civilization_failed\r |
| 880 | 1337 af\r |
| 881 | \r |
| 882 | ** MasterPythonicSlave\r |
| 883 | i installed arch in less than 10 tries i\r |
| 884 | kno what im talking abou\r |
| 885 | \r |
| 886 | \r |
| 887 | \r |
| 888 | ** Greydmiyu\r |
| 889 | [1]https://media.giphy.com/media/Fml0fgAxVx-\r |
| 890 | 1eM/giphy.gif\r |
| 891 | \r |
| 892 | \r |
| 893 | \r |
| 894 | \r |
| 895 | [1]\r |
| 896 | https://media.giphy.com/media/Fml0fgAxVx1eM-\r |
| 897 | /giphy.gif\r |
| 898 | \r |
| 899 | \r |
| 900 | ** Sempre01\r |
| 901 | ok...\r |
| 902 | \r |
| 903 | \r |
| 904 | \r |
| 905 | ** Sempre01\r |
| 906 | Thats really mean.\r |
| 907 | \r |
| 908 | \r |
| 909 | ** toidiboy\r |
| 910 | I have a better suggestion\r |
| 911 | sudo rm elitism-in-linux\r |
| 912 | \r |
| 913 | \r |
| 914 | \r |
| 915 | \r |
| 916 | \r |
| 917 | \r |
| 918 | \r |
| 919 | ** m-p-3\r |
| 920 | I guess that explains why I always find the mouse sluggish on\r |
| 921 | Linux, TIL.\r |
| 922 | \r |
| 923 | ** walterbanana\r |
| 924 | Just like Windows, to be fair. Nowadays you can change the\r |
| 925 | acceleration profile in Gnome Tweak tool, if you are using Gnome\r |
| 926 | anyway.\r |
| 927 | \r |
| 928 | ** Appofia\r |
| 929 | Flat in KDE does not disable acceleration as some people are\r |
| 930 | claiming, at least not for me, there's still acceleration\r |
| 931 | present it's just a different curve, or it's bugged.\r |
| 932 | Not having proper GUI settings for mouse controls is my number 1\r |
| 933 | issue with running Linux these days. It's baffling why something\r |
| 934 | that so many people want to change/adjust has to be done with\r |
| 935 | editing files or creating scripts.\r |
| 936 | \r |
| 937 | ** Sasamus\r |
| 938 | It's bugged, at least for some, the profile settings does not\r |
| 939 | change the profile.\r |
| 940 | \r |
| 941 | \r |
| 942 | ** paanordpolen\r |
| 943 | Long live xinput commands\r |
| 944 | \r |
| 945 | ** cloudrac3r\r |
| 946 | Play around with the xinput command-line tool. Specifically,\r |
| 947 | Device Accel Profile (aceleration type) and Device Accel\r |
| 948 | Constant Deceleration (speed). My preferred settings are -1 and\r |
| 949 | 1.25 respectively, and I have this script to set them for me:\r |
| 950 | a="$(xinput | grep 'Logitech USB Receiver' | awk '{print $6}' |\r |
| 951 | sed 's/id=//')"\r |
| 952 | for i in $a; do\r |
| 953 | b="$(xinput list-props $i | grep 'Device Accel Constant\r |
| 954 | Deceleration')"\r |
| 955 | b=${b##*(}\r |
| 956 | b=${b%%)*}\r |
| 957 | xinput set-prop $i $b 1.25\r |
| 958 | b="$(xinput list-props $i | grep 'Device Accel Profile')"\r |
| 959 | b=${b##*(}\r |
| 960 | b=${b%%)*}\r |
| 961 | xinput set-prop $i $b -1\r |
| 962 | done\r |
| 963 | For a synaptics touchpad, use the synclient command line tool.\r |
| 964 | \r |
| 965 | ** gluka_\r |
| 966 | It's true and in KDE at least, setting the slider to zero\r |
| 967 | doesn't actually give you raw input like xorg configs will (it\r |
| 968 | feels smoothed). From what I can tell, there's also no real\r |
| 969 | option for changing your desktop sensitivity once you're rid of\r |
| 970 | mouse acceleration if you don't have working DPI settings.\r |
| 971 | Changing the transform matrix through xinput seems like the best\r |
| 972 | solution, but causes the camera to spin uncontrollably in a ton\r |
| 973 | of games for some reason.\r |
| 974 | \r |
| 975 | I suppose you could make a script to disable/enable it as\r |
| 976 | needed, but most games have menus and overlays that you need to\r |
| 977 | interact with regularly so that would be a lot of hotkey presses\r |
| 978 | over time.\r |
| 979 | \r |
| 980 | ** 5had0w5talk3r\r |
| 981 | in KDE at least, setting the slider to zero doesn't actually\r |
| 982 | give you raw input\r |
| 983 | Did you set your profile to 'flat'?\r |
| 984 | \r |
| 985 | \r |
| 986 | ** Sasamus\r |
| 987 | With the adaptive profile the slider adjusts the amount of\r |
| 988 | acceleration.\r |
| 989 | With the flat profile the slider adjusts the\r |
| 990 | sensitivity/speed.\r |
| 991 | The problem is that the profile setting doesn't seem to work,\r |
| 992 | at least for some.\r |
| 993 | But the slider works as it should if you set the profile in\r |
| 994 | other ways.\r |
| 995 | \r |
| 996 | \r |
| 997 | ** ismaelbonato\r |
| 998 | xset m 00\r |
| 999 | \r |
| 1000 | ** undu\r |
| 1001 | Touchpad acceleration shouldn't be a problem anymore:\r |
| 1002 | [1]https://who-t.blogspot.com/2018/08/libinputs-new-trackpoint-a-\r |
| 1003 | cceleration.html\r |
| 1004 | \r |
| 1005 | \r |
| 1006 | \r |
| 1007 | \r |
| 1008 | [1]\r |
| 1009 | https://who-t.blogspot.com/2018/08/libinputs-new-trackpoint-acce-\r |
| 1010 | leration.html\r |
| 1011 | \r |
| 1012 | ** citewiki\r |
| 1013 | Shouldn't it be in the game settings anyway?\r |
| 1014 | \r |
| 1015 | ** Zach_Attakk\r |
| 1016 | I don't know if it's because I'm used to the "enhanced pointer\r |
| 1017 | precision" on Windows, but every time I go back to my Zorin\r |
| 1018 | machine, I keep overshooting buttons, even when moving slowly.\r |
| 1019 | I'd also like to be able to set the sensitivity of my mouse vs\r |
| 1020 | my trackpad independently, because one is super slow and the\r |
| 1021 | other super fast and I don't want to switch it every time I\r |
| 1022 | decide not to plug in the mouse.\r |
| 1023 | \r |
| 1024 | ** TurbulentCurrent\r |
| 1025 | On X you can easily disable it by typing xset m 1 0\r |
| 1026 | in the terminal\r |
| 1027 | But on Wayland (libinput), I have not found a way to disable it,\r |
| 1028 | that's why I don't use any distro that comes with Wayland.\r |
| 1029 | \r |
| 1030 | ** Saizaku_\r |
| 1031 | Just to stop missinformatiom from spreading, xset no longer\r |
| 1032 | works the way it used to due to the changes in x. You should\r |
| 1033 | use config files, read more about that here:\r |
| 1034 | [1]https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Mouse_acceleration#Di-\r |
| 1035 | sabling_mouse_acceleration\r |
| 1036 | \r |
| 1037 | \r |
| 1038 | \r |
| 1039 | \r |
| 1040 | [1]\r |
| 1041 | https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Mouse_acceleration#Disab-\r |
| 1042 | ling_mouse_acceleration\r |
| 1043 | \r |
| 1044 | \r |
| 1045 | ** inverimus\r |
| 1046 | Honestly, most people probably want it on, so having to use some\r |
| 1047 | google searches to turn it off is not a very big deal.\r |
| 1048 | \r |
| 1049 | ** lordofbud\r |
| 1050 | Not trying to bash you, but if you're using a physical mouse\r |
| 1051 | instead of a touch pad, why would you want mouse acceleration\r |
| 1052 | on?\r |
| 1053 | It out right annoys me, the first thing I set out to address\r |
| 1054 | on a fresh install is disabling it.\r |
| 1055 | \r |
| 1056 | ** inverimus\r |
| 1057 | I don't have it on, but I think most people do not bother\r |
| 1058 | ever turning it off and are used to it being on all the\r |
| 1059 | time.\r |
| 1060 | \r |
| 1061 | \r |
| 1062 | \r |
| 1063 | ** MightyWheatley\r |
| 1064 | still, there should be an easy to find option for those who\r |
| 1065 | want to turn it off\r |
| 1066 | \r |
| 1067 | \r |
| 1068 | ** Prime624\r |
| 1069 | Huh. I actually love the mouse sensitivity and acceleration on\r |
| 1070 | Linux (and Mac). I can barely use a windows mouse anymore, it's\r |
| 1071 | so touchy or sluggish, no good balance.\r |
| 1072 | \r |
| 1073 | ** volca02\r |
| 1074 | It's okay if you do - but there are those with high-dpi mice\r |
| 1075 | used to RAW input without any acceleration - and I'm one of\r |
| 1076 | them. It's mind boggling why the common desktop environments\r |
| 1077 | don't allow for total bypass of the mouse input processing.\r |
| 1078 | \r |
| 1079 | \r |
| 1080 | ** LordMacharius\r |
| 1081 | I prefer accuracy, mouse acceleration on a mouse is the most\r |
| 1082 | frustrating thing to work with.\r |
| 1083 | \r |
| 1084 | \r |
| 1085 | ** the_Madman\r |
| 1086 | KDE's mouse settings panel allows you to set the acceleration to\r |
| 1087 | "dynamic"or "flat". I switched it off the first chance I got.\r |
| 1088 | \r |
| 1089 | ** 84521\r |
| 1090 | Is that why the mouse is so fucky in Ubuntu? And no way to\r |
| 1091 | toggle it off?\r |
| 1092 | \r |
| 1093 | ** ReadAParadox\r |
| 1094 | You can disable it in Ubuntu but it's kinda complicated, first\r |
| 1095 | install gnome-tweak-tool then go to mouse settings (in\r |
| 1096 | gnome-tweak-tool) then change acceleration profile from whatever\r |
| 1097 | it is to flat.\r |
| 1098 | \r |
| 1099 | ** supamesican\r |
| 1100 | YUp, my biggest complaint about it. Manjaro doesnt seem too bad\r |
| 1101 | about it but still its not ok\r |
| 1102 | \r |
| 1103 | ** EdgiPing\r |
| 1104 | Upvote for the edit.\r |
| 1105 | \r |
| 1106 | ** GeeWhizWithout\r |
| 1107 | I have used Linux in some fashion for decades. Work, pleasure,\r |
| 1108 | etc. Mouse issues are my most hated thing. I use a trackball and\r |
| 1109 | it's not always good.\r |
| 1110 | \r |
| 1111 | ** UltimaN3rd\r |
| 1112 | I installed Ubuntu 18.04 fresh just a few weeks ago and don't\r |
| 1113 | have any mouse acceleration by default. It was always a problem\r |
| 1114 | before but it seems like they changed it?\r |
| 1115 | \r |
| 1116 | ** BenkiTheBuilder\r |
| 1117 | I'm just using plain X11 with Fluxbox (on Ubuntu Xenial) and\r |
| 1118 | haven't changed anything regarding mouse. And I'm happy with how\r |
| 1119 | the cursor moves. Guess it's an anti-feature of Desktop\r |
| 1120 | Environments.\r |
| 1121 | \r |
| 1122 | ** mao_dze_dun\r |
| 1123 | I have absolutely no idea why you got ANY downvotes. This has\r |
| 1124 | been a legitimate problem that has been present on, at least,\r |
| 1125 | all Ubuntu based distros I've used. They want to increase market\r |
| 1126 | share but can't fix the effing mouse? What the hell?\r |
| 1127 | \r |
| 1128 | ** stormicex\r |
| 1129 | It's the reason I still use windows. Even if I disable the mouse\r |
| 1130 | acceleration from tweak tool the feel of the mouse is horrible\r |
| 1131 | in csgo. I tried 5 years ago and tried again some months ago.\r |
| 1132 | Still shit. We'll see in another 5 years lol\r |
| 1133 | \r |
| 1134 | ** LordMacharius\r |
| 1135 | You can't be bothered to look up the software you need so you\r |
| 1136 | use Windows instead, wtf?\r |
| 1137 | \r |
| 1138 | ** stormicex\r |
| 1139 | maybe you need to read again my post. Even with\r |
| 1140 | acceleration disabled mouse feels weird on linux compared\r |
| 1141 | to what feel on windows. Aim is super important while\r |
| 1142 | playing csgo and if my mouse don't feel precise i can't\r |
| 1143 | play on linux.\r |
| 1144 | \r |
| 1145 | \r |
| 1146 | \r |
| 1147 | ** tutami\r |
| 1148 | This and screen tearing is linuxs doom. We need to fix those\r |
| 1149 | issues\r |
| 1150 | \r |
| 1151 | ** n30p1r4t3\r |
| 1152 | No screen tearing to speak of for me on mesa/amdgpu... I’ve\r |
| 1153 | only ever had screen tearing using intel or nvidia.\r |
| 1154 | \r |
| 1155 | ** tutami\r |
| 1156 | %90 ppl are using Nvidia/Intel. There are workatounds but\r |
| 1157 | at the cost of performance etc\r |
| 1158 | \r |
| 1159 | \r |
| 1160 | \r |
| 1161 | \r |