- Mac Os Trackpad Three Finger Drag Tool
- Mac Three Finger Drag
- Mac Trackpad On Windows 10
- Mac Trackpad On Windows
For more information about these gestures, choose Apple menu System Preferences, then click Trackpad. You can turn a gesture off, change the type of gesture, and learn which gestures work with your Mac. Trackpad gestures require a Magic Trackpad or built-in Multi-Touch trackpad. Click on Trackpad Options. Click on 'Three Finger Drag' in the dropdown menu. Now you can easily move things around in OS X El Capitan by tapping with three fingers and dragging. Before the advent of the Force Touch trackpad on the 12' Macbook (and the new 13' Retina MacBook Pro), you could enable a gesture entitled Three Finger Drag. With that gesture, using three fingers you could touch the top bar of any window in OS X and drag the window around. I personally prefer it because click-dragging feels like it would help.
Special thank to Gaz Williams for pointing this out during today's Sonic TALKHow to Enable Three Finger Drag Mac OS. Enabling Three Finger Drag, on Mac OS X El Capitan, Mac OS Sierra, MacOS Mojave.
You'll find the setting under System Preferences > Accessibility > Mouse & Trackpad > Trackpad options... > Enable dragging > three finger drag
- three-finger-drag.jpg (146.99 KiB) Viewed 660 times
This works great for moving controls in software such as Reason without having to click and apply pressure. The upshot is it seems to remove the ability to use the three finger gestures for other things. Swiping between full-screen apps then becomes a four finger swipe. Anybody else here using this or knew about this trick? Any other hidden features in macOS that you use?
Something I found when I enabled the three finger drag via Accessibility, it that it seems to have also automatically enabled 'tap to click' under the regular Trackpad settings (System Preferences > Trackpad > Point & Click). I don't like that feature, but was able to turn it off and keep the three finger drag behavior. Not sure if anybody else might encounter this, but figured I'd give the heads up.
The Trackpad (or the mouse touchpad) that comes with the Macbook Pros and Airs these days, which is also available as a separate product to be used with iMacs or Windows systems, was launched sometime in 2010 and Apple calls it Magic Trackpad.
It was not just Apple's obsession with the word 'magic' that resulted in the name that this product was anointed with. The Trackpad was a revolution in many ways. It introduced some amazing gestures and enabled people to move from the old one or two-finger clicks or scrolls to using three fingers, horizontal scroll, pinching gestures for zooming in or out, and more. (image credit – kazzhx)
You may also customize the Trackpad gestures and change the scroll or drag behavior in a way that suits you the best. This is what we'll see in this post.
Steps to Customize Trackpad Gestures in OS X Lion
Mac Os Trackpad Three Finger Drag Tool
Step 1: Click on the Apple Menu and then click on System Preferences.
Step 2: Click on the icon that says Trackpad.
Step 3: You'll now see the Trackpad options window popping up. You can see 3 tabs at the top – Point & Click, Scroll & Zoom and More Gestures. Lets check out the first one.
You may browse through the options and customize them according to your preferences. For example, the Secondary click or the right-click can be customized to a bottom right corner click or bottom left corner click from the default two fingers tap.
Step 4: Moving on to the Scroll & Zoom options, you may set the scroll and zoom operations here according to your liking. A quick demo is shown on the right as you select the options.
Step 5: Finally, we've got the More Gestures page where you can customize the new gestures that Lion introduced (swiping between full-screen apps and mission control for example). It's all pretty easy. Just click on an option, select the one you want from the dropdown menu and you're done.
If you ask me, I did face some initial hiccups while using the Trackpad which I guess any longtime Windows user is likely to face. But over the days, the Trackpad has grown on me and I've started to enjoy the various gestures it allows me to use for controlling the OS.
What about you? Do you like the Magic Trackpad? Customized the gestures yet?
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Mac Three Finger Drag
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