6

I'd like to disable hardware buttons on the synaptic touchpad, but still be able to use the touchpad and "tap"-click on its surface. I don't find the related options in the output of synclient -l.

Note that I don't want to disable the touchpad completely. Only to make it ignore the hardware buttons, but still respond to taps.

Zanna
  • 69,223
  • 56
  • 216
  • 327
sastanin
  • 334
  • 3
  • 11

3 Answers3

2

Filed a bug against gpointing-device-settings #793440. It seems impossible to do what I want with the current version of the software. Question closed.

sastanin
  • 334
  • 3
  • 11
1

Disabling Touchpad:

Press Alt+F2 and type gconf-editor and click Run.

alt text

Navigate to desktop>gnome>peripherals>touchpad,in the right panel uncheck the entry touchpad_enabled.

alt text

Now your touchpad will be disabled.

To turn off touchpad completely install gpointing-device-settings Install gpointing-device-settings. After installation you can access it under System > Preferences > Touchpad

UPDATE:

Zanna
  • 69,223
  • 56
  • 216
  • 327
karthick87
  • 80,647
  • 59
  • 193
  • 232
  • 2
    Thank you, but I'd like not to disable the touchpad completely. Only to make it ignore the _hardware_ buttons, but still respond to taps. – sastanin Dec 07 '10 at 11:23
  • 1
    I suggest you [file against gpointing-device-settings](http://pad.lv/fb/u/gpointing-device-settings); this doesn't seem to be currently possible. – poolie Apr 20 '11 at 00:35
  • Thank you, @poolie, I filed this as https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gpointing-device-settings/+bug/793440. I you wrote this as an answer, I'd be able to accept it. – sastanin Jun 06 '11 at 10:11
1

This will disable the hardware buttons and the "tap" feature, but you will be able to move the pointer:

1) Create this file:

gedit ~/.Xmodmap  

2) Paste this into it:

pointer = 0 0 0  

3) Logout and log back in, or reboot, or run this:

xmodmap ~/.Xmodmap  

To get it back to normal:

1) Edit the file:

gedit ~/.Xmodmap  

2) And change to:

pointer = default  

3) Logout and log back in, or reboot, or run this:

xmodmap ~/.Xmodmap  

4) If this file doesn't have anything else, then you can delete it after step "3":

rm ~/.Xmodmap  
desgua
  • 32,669
  • 9
  • 99
  • 120