When it comes to using a mouse, everyone is different. Some like fast double-clicking, others like natural scrolling. Maybe you prefer a traditional button mouse to Apple's Magic Mouse.
In OS X, you just assign Cmd or ctrl + mouse scroll for zooming in. This works anywhere, in any app. Windows 7 also has a nice magnifier, and has some hotkeys: Magnifier keyboard shortcuts. The following table contains keyboard shortcuts for working with Magnifier. The Vectorworks program includes zoom functionality through the mouse wheel. Press the Ctrl (Windows) or Option (Mac) key while you roll in order to zoom.
Maybe you want to use right-clicking again. Whatever your preferences are, you can customize them to suit you better. How to change the scroll direction, right-click, and tracking speed of your mouse on a Mac The Mac operating system makes it possible for you to make adjustments to the basic actions on your mouse with just a few simple steps. Click the Apple icon () in the upper-left corner of your screen. Select System Preferences.
From the dropdown menu. Click on Mouse in the System Preferences window. Click on Point & Click. Tick the box for Scrolling direction: natural to make the mouse scroll the same direction that your finger moves. Tick the box for Secondary click to enable right-clicking. Click the arrow below Secondary Click to choose whether you use the right or left side of the mouse to trigger secondary clicking. Note: you cannot change the secondary clicking side on a non-Apple mouse.
Drag the Tracking Speed slider left or right to increase or decrease the speed at which your mouse pointer moves across the screen. How to change the speed of double-clicking your mouse on a Mac If you are a fast mover, you may sometimes accidentally trigger double-clicking when you didn't mean to. You can change how fast or slow you need to click a second time to trigger double-clicking on the Mac operating system. Click the Apple icon () in the upper-left corner of your screen. Select System Preferences.
From the dropdown menu. Click on Accessibility in the System Preferences window. Scroll down and select Mouse & Trackpad from the menu on the left side of the Accessibility window. Drag the Double-click speed slider to the right or left to increase or decrease how fast you must click the mouse to trigger the double-click feature. Note: At its slowest, you can wait as long as four seconds between clicks to trigger double-clicking. Tick the box for Spring-loading delay to enable the feature that opens a folder when you hover over it with a file.
Note: This feature is usually enabled by default. Drag the Spring-loading delay slider right or left to increase or decrease how long you have to hover over a folder with a file before it opens.
How to change the scrolling speed of your mouse on a Mac. Click the Apple icon () in the upper-left corner of your screen. Select System Preferences. From the dropdown menu.
Click on Accessibility in the System Preferences window. Scroll down and select Mouse & Trackpad from the menu on the left side of the Accessibility window. Click on Mouse Options. Drag the Scrolling speed slider to the right or left to speed up or slow down how fast you can scroll down on a page.
Click OK to exit. How to change the gestures of your Magic Mouse on a Mac. Click the Apple icon () in the upper-left corner of your screen. Select System Preferences. From the dropdown menu. Click on Mouse in the System Preferences window. Click on Point & Click.
Tick the box for Smart zoom to enable the ability to double-tap the Magic Mouse to zoom in a window. Click on More Gestures. Tick the box for Swipe between pages to use your finger to swipe or scroll left and right on the Magic Mouse. Click the arrow below Swipe Between Pages to choose whether you scroll left and right with one finger, swipe left and right with two fingers, or swipe left and right with one or two fingers.
Tick the box for Swipe between full-screen apps to enable the ability to swipe left or right to switch from one full-screen to another. Tick the box for Mission Control to enable the ability to lightly tap the Magic Mouse to call up Mission Control. Any questions? Do you have any questions about how to change the mouse settings on your Mac? Let us know in the comments and we'll answer them for you.
On openstreetmap.org, mouse-wheel zooming is far too sensitive and impossible to control with an Apple Magic Mouse (whose “mouse wheel” is a touch panel). Using the website is very frustrating. Specifically, while panning around with mouse click, every mouse-up risks zooming the map randomly in or out. Whether trying to zoom or not, even very small movements risk unintentionally zooming two or three levels at a time. Sometimes a zoom out is immediately followed by an unintentional zoom in, or vice versa.
Sometimes I have to attempt a zoom several times in a row, and the repeated and jumpy visual zoom is on the verge of inducing motion sickness. Is there a way to reduce the mouse-wheel sensitivity for the site? Barring that, is there a way to disable it?
Background info:. This is the mouse that comes with all desktop Macs. There is no software sensitivity control for this mouse’s zoom. Scrolling and zooming work very well in most other apps and websites (for example, scroll-zooming in Google Maps is pretty good). Hallo Michael I have this problem with the Apple Magic Mouse on a number of sites.
You can disable the feature on your Mac under Preferences-Mouse but then, if like me, you use the feature elsewhere, you have to re-enable it - a bit of a fag really. So, to get around it, I simply bought and installed another (wired) mouse which has a zoom feature via the scroll wheel. This is less likely to zoom by accident. So now I use the Apple mouse for almost everything and simply change over to the wired mouse for zoomable maps. Hope that helps John.