On Sun, 17 Mar 2019 at 19:35:17 +0100, Ulf Brosziewski wrote:
> Hi Joshua,
>
> could you make a test with the updated diff below and check whether
> the scroll speed is normal? (There are no changes in ws, it's just
> the kernel part).
Hi, this version scrolls much better.
Hi Joshua,
could you make a test with the updated diff below and check whether
the scroll speed is normal? (There are no changes in ws, it's just
the kernel part).
On 3/16/19 4:16 PM, joshua stein wrote:
> On Thu, 14 Mar 2019 at 00:48:33 +0100, Ulf Brosziewski wrote:
>> Much too fast? I'm a bit
On Thu, 14 Mar 2019 at 00:48:33 +0100, Ulf Brosziewski wrote:
> Much too fast? I'm a bit surprised. In my tests, the new method was
> generally somewhat slower than the old one (and I haven't changed the
> "scroll units"). How did you test it? Which hardware and which applications
> did you
On Thu, Mar 14, 2019 at 01:40:55AM +0100, Ulf Brosziewski wrote:
> Anyway, first we should make sure that the mechanism
> is sound; I'm a bit puzzled by Joshua's report and hope there will be
> more tests.
Your change works well on my x250 and x201.
Compared to my x220, which currently runs the
On 3/13/19 4:49 PM, Martin Pieuchot wrote:
> On 13/03/19(Wed) 00:41, Ulf Brosziewski wrote:
>> The standard method of scrolling in X is tailored to mouse wheels and
>> proceeds in coarse steps. Wheel events are mapped to button events, and on
>> receiving such an event, an application moves the
On 3/13/19 5:27 PM, joshua stein wrote:
> On Wed, 13 Mar 2019 at 00:41:12 +0100, Ulf Brosziewski wrote:
>> The standard method of scrolling in X is tailored to mouse wheels and
>> proceeds in coarse steps. Wheel events are mapped to button events, and on
>> receiving such an event, an application
On Wed, 13 Mar 2019 at 00:41:12 +0100, Ulf Brosziewski wrote:
> The standard method of scrolling in X is tailored to mouse wheels and
> proceeds in coarse steps. Wheel events are mapped to button events, and on
> receiving such an event, an application moves the view of its data by some
> fixed
On 13/03/19(Wed) 00:41, Ulf Brosziewski wrote:
> The standard method of scrolling in X is tailored to mouse wheels and
> proceeds in coarse steps. Wheel events are mapped to button events, and on
> receiving such an event, an application moves the view of its data by some
> fixed distance -