riokeron.blogg.se

Os x logitech control center no logitech device found g402
Os x logitech control center no logitech device found g402







  1. #OS X LOGITECH CONTROL CENTER NO LOGITECH DEVICE FOUND G402 INSTALL#
  2. #OS X LOGITECH CONTROL CENTER NO LOGITECH DEVICE FOUND G402 SERIAL#
  3. #OS X LOGITECH CONTROL CENTER NO LOGITECH DEVICE FOUND G402 SOFTWARE#

The key bindings described above works great, but consider battlefield 4 also has a terrible time recognizing the mouse as a mouse with 10 buttons so for that I had to map my 4 thumb buttons to =, \ and. Then go haul it back over to your linux box and it works perfectly.

os x logitech control center no logitech device found g402

Switch apps = alt + tab = lower thumb forward button + index finger closer button (remember for this to work well you need to keep holding down thumb button, so you can switch past 1 app)įading a window (transparency) = alt + scroll wheel = thumb lower forward button + scroll wheel Switch workspace = alt + ctl + mouse drag = lower 2 thumb buttons together + mouse click and drag sounds complicated when typed it out but it's very efficient to use. Index finger farther away from you = alt-f4 (compiz/linux/winX close app) Index finger middle button = ctrl + alt + numpad 5 Thumb button 4 (rear upper) = superkey (windows key) alt + scroll wheel up becomes thumb button 1 + scroll wheel up.

os x logitech control center no logitech device found g402

As for compiz consider setting the 4 side thumbs buttons to alt, ctl, shift, superkey, as this will make using switching easier with the scroll wheel. I'd recommend utilizing the switch profiles function so you can set it up good for normal usage, ie: running your linux desktop, compiz functions (switching apps, switching workspaces, toggling maximize, etc), and then make another profile for gaming (possibly with a different refresh rate) and the gaming buttons. basically you need to plug the mouse into a windows box, and configure it exactly how you want it.

#OS X LOGITECH CONTROL CENTER NO LOGITECH DEVICE FOUND G402 SOFTWARE#

The bad news is to configure it correctly you need to use the logitech software that only runs in windows. The functions for the mouse are stored in the mouse. The good news is that it was expensive (for a mouse) and the manufacture actually built it to a high standard. If you will tell me the button numbers of your buttons and what you want each to do, I will write the script for you.

os x logitech control center no logitech device found g402

This would bind Ctrl to mouse button one. To make a button act as Ctrl we would add: "xte 'key Control_L'" We are going to use xte to set bindings to our buttons. You can open this file with gedit $HOME/.xbindkeysrc. Next we need to add the key/button bindings to the config file. Step 2Ĭreate the xbindkeys config file using: xbindkeys -defaults > $HOME/.xbindkeysrc That tells us that particular button is button one. This is what is important from that output: button 1. (note: xev also capture mouse movement so you might need to sift through mouse movement events to find your button events e.g.: xev -event mouse | grep Button -before-context=1 -after-context=2)

#OS X LOGITECH CONTROL CENTER NO LOGITECH DEVICE FOUND G402 SERIAL#

You should get output like this for each button: ButtonRelease event, serial 41, synthetic NO, window 0x4c00001, You will see a litle white windows appear, put your mouse in it and press your mouse buttons (it's best to do this one button at a time).

os x logitech control center no logitech device found g402

You need to find the button numbers for the buttons on your mouse. ( xev was merged into x11utils, as of Ubuntu 14.04 or greater) Step 1

#OS X LOGITECH CONTROL CENTER NO LOGITECH DEVICE FOUND G402 INSTALL#

Sudo apt-get install xbindkeys xautomation xev Sudo apt-get install xbindkeys xautomation x11-utils You're going to need several applications for this, to install them run # Ubuntu 14.04 and newer









Os x logitech control center no logitech device found g402