Use inertia when scrolling: Control what happens when you lift your finger from the mouse. Use mouse for scrolling: Turn scrolling on or off (for a mouse such as a Magic Mouse). Three Finger Drag: Drag an item with three fingers dragging stops when you lift your fingers. With Drag Lock: Double-tap an item, then drag it without lifting your finger after the second tap dragging continues when you lift your finger, and stops when you tap the trackpad once. To immediately prevent further dragging, tap the trackpad once. The item can still be dragged for a fraction of a second (so you can reposition your finger if it’s at the edge of the trackpad). Without Drag Lock: Double-tap an item, then drag it without lifting your finger after the second tap when you lift your finger, the item stops moving. Use trackpad for dragging: Turn dragging on or off.ĭragging style: Choose an option to control dragging. Scroll speed: The speed at which you scroll through documents and windows using the trackpad. With this option turned on, scrolling comes to a gradual stop. Use inertia when scrolling: Control what happens when you lift your finger from the trackpad. Use trackpad for scrolling: Turn scrolling on or off. For information, see the documentation for your mouse. If you use a non-Apple mouse, the driver software that came with your mouse may prevent this option from working as expected. Ignore built-in trackpad when mouse or wireless trackpad is presentĭisable the built-in trackpad on your Mac when you use a mouse or wireless trackpad. With Spring-loading turned on, adjust how long after you drag an item to a folder and hold before the folder opens. When dragging and dropping, drag an item to a folder and hold to open the folder. Get started with accessibility featuresĪdjust the mouse or trackpad’s reaction time when you double-click an item.Use Sign in with Apple for apps and websites.Watch and listen together with SharePlay.Share and collaborate on files and folders.Sync music, books, and more between devices.Make and receive phone calls on your Mac.Use one keyboard and mouse to control Mac and iPad.Use Live Text to interact with text in a photo.Make text and other items on the screen bigger.Install and reinstall apps from the App Store.If you wanted to, you could actually keep one finger in place on the trackpad and use two fingers for dragging, but that's a bit awkward. As long as you keep your other two fingers in place on the trackpad, you can lift your third finger without letting go of what you're dragging. It works very much like scrolling with inertia. When you do this, you can use a flick gesture with the finger that's moving and whatever you're dragging will continue to move after you lift that finger, gradually slowing down. This is like the three-finger drag, but instead of moving all three fingers, you only move one finger, keeping the other two in place on the trackpad. With Dragging enabled, you may notice a delay when tapping compared to when it's disabled (at least in Lion). In Snow Leopard, the Dragging and Drag Lock settings are in System Preferences > Trackpad, but in Lion they were moved to System Preferences > Universal Access > Mouse & Trackpad > Trackpad Options. Rather you have to tap/click the trackpad to end the drag. When enabled, the drag does not end after lifting your finger(s) from the trackpad. Drag Lockĭrag Lock works with both the "one-finger tap & drag" and the "three-finger drag". Again, a single tap will end the drag without the delay. This has the same delay as the one-finger drag, so you can reposition your fingers and continue dragging. Tap the trackpad with three fingers and drag all three fingers. To end a drag immediately (without the delay) you can tap the trackpad again. There is a short delay from when you lift your finger from the trackpad and when the drag actually ends, during which, you can reposition your finger on the trackpad to continue dragging. With Dragging enabled, tap the trackpad twice and start dragging on the second tap (instead of lifting your finger from the trackpad). While the button is depressed, you can reposition your "dragging" finger without letting go of what you're dragging.
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