Touchpads also take up little space on your desk. They prevent the mouse from slipping all the time, making for a clearer working environment. An added bonus is the extensive multi-touch gestures. With them, you can optimize your workflow. Simple scrolling, switching applications by swiping, or zooming by pinching your fingers together are all intuitive movements that are particularly helpful when editing photos, videos, or spreadsheets.

If you already use a touchpad on your laptop or tablet, the switch to a desktop touchpad will be easy. You already know the gestures and your muscle memory will quickly adapt. Despite all the advantages, there are people for whom a touchpad is not the best choice.


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Gamers, for example, often prefer the precision and speed of a gaming mouse. Likewise, people will continue to stick with mouse control who work with complicated graphics or designs that they need to adjust very finely. But why not use the best of both worlds and switch between mouse and touchpad depending on the task? Try it out and discover the possibilities that a touchpad offers.

The issue here though is the touchpad two-finger scrolling action is given to us by the operating system the same way as a mouse scrollwheel action - we have no way of telling them apart. Therefore, we can only have one configuration for the scrollwheel and it applies to the touchpads and normal mice.

Ubuntu 16.04: The settings menu used to have separate settings for external mouse and touchpad, now it only contains one set of settings for both. The settings for pointer speed actually do not change any behavior of the mouse - the mouse motion doesn't change regardless the change in the speed setting.

It looks like this might have been an issue before... mouse and touchpad settings missing...but I am running 16.04, not 14.04. There is no touchpad-indicator program by default, and when adding the repository listed in one of the answers, it didn't help anything.

The touchpad works, it is at an okay speed, I can scroll with two-fingers, but these are all settings I set before Settings broke like this. I can no longer change the speed, disable two-finger scrolling, or anything like that. No mouse settings, except for double-click speed and primary button work.

Hello everyone,

I'm a new user to linux and I've been trying off and on for a couple of months now to get gestures like two finger scrolling to work on my laptop's touchpad. In that time I've dug through just about every message board post (relevant or not) looking for information that could help me understand how to set up my touchpad. In the time that I've spent looking over this I've learned that this is one of the most difficult questions to answer for linux users, but I really hoped that this might serve as a waypoint for an updated guide in 2023 and that by consulting you, the Arch gurus I might be able to finally figure out once and for all what standard protocol is for setting up my touchpad. I recognize that this is similar to some questions other users have asked but didn't feel that it was a duplicate after following along with the steps those posts suggested and still not arriving at a solution.

I'm using a Dell Inspiron 5515, my xinput reads as the following:

And there it is; My touchpad shows up but doesn't appear to be functioning and instead is being caught as a PS/2 Generic mouse. I've tried using numerous different packages to enable gesture support and to interpret my touchpad as more than just a mouse to no avail, packages such as libinput, libinput-gestures, and synaptics, but I've found that my attempts at following the Arch wiki setup guide for each of these packages still has not enabled me to get this functionality working. The Synaptics/Gestures entry under the wiki states that it's been deprecated but that there may still be reasons to use it, one being for laptop gestures. More reading has suggested that because my laptop supports Microsoft's i2c-hid protocol that this is the culprit of the numerous problems that I've had setting up gestures to work with my laptop. 

Because most of the information that I'm finding is outdated I thought this question deserved to be asked again as an updated guide: What is the current standard/working protocol for setting up new touchpads for use with gestures? Is synaptics still recommended for laptop gesture control or is libinput the best and current solution now that synaptics has been deprecated? How do i2c-hid protocols affect the setup of new touchpads? I would appreciate any information anyone has on this topic through either your own experience or what you can find because I feel that I've exhausted my ability to solve this issue, and I hope that the collective sum of our knowledge here will serve as a waypoint for others so no one else has to spend months searching for answers to set this up anymore. Thank you all in advance.

After several months I've gotten it to work. In case anyone else stumbles upon this thread I wanted to detail what helped me figure out what was going on.

I couple days ago I stumbled upon another post that mentioned reloading the psmouse module that my touchpad was being caught as. When I would utilize the command:

sudo modprobe -rv psmouse; sudo modprobe -v psmouse

I realized that my gesture control worked for a fraction of a second before failing again. I had read in several places about disabling various drivers through the 'blacklist' command in the modprobe.conf. I had tried disabling my I2C_HID drivers, which weren't the source of the problem, and eventually tried blacklisting this psmouse module I had worked with up above. I had tried turning off this module before in my session which caused the mouse to stop working altogether, but when I rebooted after using this blacklist command I found that my touchpad finally worked! I'm using the xf86-input-synaptics package and blacklisting the module that my mouse was being loaded as, which seems to allow the kernel drivers for my touchpad to load correctly. This issue turned out to be one of figuring out what the right module to disable was.

If anyone should stumble upon this thread looking for help I hope this is of use to you: Find the drivers that are being loaded on your touchpad related to the xinput name of your input device that shouldn't exist (PS/2 Mouse for me instead of my touchpad), and blacklist the driver to enable the correct loading of your touchpad.

I have gone back and forth between using mouse/touchpad testing what is better and after a lot of trials I came to the conclusion that mouse is at least 2x faster to work with so I will use it most times.

On a ThinkPad, the track point, because I can keep my hands on the keyboard. On a Macbook Pro, the trackpad, because it's accurate and responsive. On any other machine, a mouse, since everyone is using the cheapest trackpads they can get away with.

I use the trackpad on my MacBook Pro. I feel like it's much faster to move your hand from the keyboard to the trackpad rather than to a mouse. I know the difference is less than a quarter of a second, but it feels annoying to use a mouse after being used to a trackpad. This, of course, depends heavily on the quality of the trackpad. MBP's trackpad feels just right, so I don't feel like I'm missing out on cursor accuracy, but other laptops' trackpads may not do it for me.

Hahaha that's great! ?

Trackballs were more common once (late '90s), but some still use them.

The initial impact can be brutal, so it's not surprising almost nobody use them anymore, but once you get the hang of it a trackball can be really efficient (tested myself). Not like a mouse, but still:

Can't use a trackpad for more than brief non-dev purposes. And I can't use laptop keyboards.

So I always carry both a wireless mouse and a mechanical keyboard with my laptop. Given my way, I'd get a laptop with a built-in mechanical keyboard, no trackpad at all.

My hands are big enough that I will rest it on the trackpad, and that screws up where the mouse is on screen. Since I'm in Linux and have "Focus follows mouse" turned on, moving the mouse to another window means I'm not typing where I want it to be. And that's a bad thing.

It's something I'm accustomed to when using PCs when I was in college. The default window manager was FVWM and it had a "where you type is what window the mouse is in" policy, aka "focus follows mouse." I find that it helps track where it is. Besides, web pages are so bloated I can hide the mouse cursor in all that fat. ;)

Obviously the ideal end-goal is to master hotkeys, which really isn't that hard with a bit of patience. The speed difference of smashing down a hotkey combo while your hands are already on the keyboard compared to moving your hand over to grab the mouse, move it accurately to the correct area of pixels on the screen and then to the next pixels for each follow-on click is massive.

For everything else, I avoid using the laptop inputs completely. A regular keyboard and mouse is far more comfortable and ergonomic for anything but the shortest of simple tasks. Another reason is that I'd rather get dirt or spillages on a keyboard/mouse than my laptop, especially given how close the screen gets to those dirty keys when you close it.

As mice (and excessive use of trackpads) cause wrist pain for me, I rarely use a mouse at all. I am using vim as my editor and firefox with a vim plugin for browsing.

If I have to use the mouse, I use the trackpoint on my ThinkPad

I would prefer mouse but then again I feel more 'in-the-flow' when I don't take my hands from the keyboard at all - just using hot keys and short cuts. Actually, a colleague can navigate his workspace without touching the mouse at all but for me that's utopia ?

When coding: I will disable the trackpad (most laptops have a special key to disable it) and use a wireless mouse when on a desk. When on a couch, I will try to use the mouse on a nearby flat surface. If impossible to use a mouse, I will use the trackpad. 2351a5e196

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