![]() Last edited by carlsmith September 19th, 2010 at 11:29 PM. ![]() There is some way you can change the sensitivity for twitchy mouses if that's an issue, but I dunno how to do it. Change the 2 to the number of seconds you'd like unclutter to wait before it hides the cursor, I find 2 works fine. If you want to try unclutter, do sudo apt-get install unclutter, then add the line: I really don't fully understand exactly how X11 works. I think a lot of it comes down to my own incompetency. There are various reasons why you’d need to hide the mouse. I've played around with unclutter and got it working well enough, but it's still really brittle. AutoHideMouseCursor is a small and friendly desktop application that can be set to automatically hide the mouse cursor for a specified time period once the mouse becomes inactive. I'm using wmii2 as the window manager, so this might be something to do with it, but unclutter doesn't work for me.įor the record, wmii2 is pretty good if you want that style of WM, but it takes some getting used to - be sure to read the intro on the website. ![]() This might be helpful if, say, you're taking a number of screen grabs and would like the cursor to stay out of sight. Even if I just ran it manually on the command line, it still crashed. AutoHideMouseCursor is a tiny portable tool which automatically hides the mouse cursor when it hasn't moved for a specified period of time. ![]() It only has one error message, 'someone created a sub-window to my sub-window! giving up', but I got it every time I opened an new window. I tried unclutter and got it running in the background as a start up app, but it kept crashing. ![]()
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