![]() ![]() Or at least, it is sorted for every app except Rhino.įor some reason Rhino doesn’t follow the settings from Scroll Reverser (what I was referring to as a ‘system wide setting’ because it works system wide). It allows one setting for trackpad and another for scroll wheel. This is easily achieved with scroll reverser. reverse scroll - arrow down when stopped back to first line - H key - make short keystrokes. What I want is to split the setting so that the trackpad uses ‘natural’ setting and fhe scroll wheel of a mouse uses the opposite. C - Align the selected objects along their vertical centerlines. Then, with your mouse connected, go back to your Mouse settings in the System Preferences and adjust scrolling accordingly. 'Ignore built-in trackpad when mouse or wireless trackpad is present'. Tweak the settings to get things working how you want, this depends whether you have natural scrolling on or off in your mouse and trackpad settings. Try this: Go to Accessibility settings for Mouse & Trackpad in System Preferences. Open up Scroll Reverser and you’ll be prompted that it is now running. Also happens on a 13' retina macbook pro early 2015 10.10.5 works fine after a reboot. After waking up the MBA from several hours of sleep. I am using v1.7.1 of Scroll Reverser and have 'Reverse Trackpad' checked out in the settings. Unfortunately, it doesn’t make sense with a scroll wheel, especially when using it to zoom in and out in a 3D app like Rhino. Open up the ZIP and drag the app into your Applications directory. This problem happens after the 10.10.2 update. Natural, makes sense on a trackpad it mimics the way an iOS device works and is easy to make the mental ‘leap’ to using that way. click on the icon on the toolbar, go to preferences, and un-check the reverse mouse option. Natural and I guess ‘un-natural’ (I can’t recall right now what the terminology is they use). go into system preferences and make sure the box that enables natural track pad scrolling is NOT checked. it does exactly what its name implies.Launch it and you're done - set it to run on login and it will be permanent until you uncheck it to do so. There is a tiny little free app around called 'Scroll reverser for Mac OS X'. It is intuitive for touchpads but might be confusing for traditional mices. Maybe I’ll start explaining again and start with what I want to achieve.Īpple has a setting for scroll direction. the reverse scrolling is Apple's new default. I’m sorry, if I’m not explaining things well enough and it seems I got the wrong end of the stick with your questions.
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