Mouse Actions icon
Mouse Actions icon

Mouse Actions

You can control your computer with mouse gestures. You can assign different commands to mouse events, such as clicking, scrolling, or moving the mouse to the sides or edges of the screen. You can also draw shapes with the mouse to trigger specific commands.

Mouse Actions screenshot 1

Cost / License

  • Free
  • Open Source

Application type

Platforms

  • Linux
-
No reviews
2likes
0comments
0news articles

Features

Suggest and vote on features
No features, maybe you want to suggest one?

 Tags

  • easystroke

Mouse Actions News & Activities

Highlights All activities

Recent News

No news, maybe you know any news worth sharing?
Share a News Tip

Recent activities

No activities found.

Mouse Actions information

  • Developed by

    jersou
  • Licensing

    Open Source (MIT) and Free product.
  • Written in

  • Alternatives

    4 alternatives listed
  • Supported Languages

    • English

GitHub repository

  •  243 Stars
  •  12 Forks
  •  40 Open Issues
  •   Updated  
View on GitHub
Mouse Actions was added to AlternativeTo by arcsnim on and this page was last updated .
No comments or reviews, maybe you want to be first?
Post comment/review

What is Mouse Actions?

You can control your computer with mouse gestures. You can assign different commands to mouse events, such as clicking, scrolling, or moving the mouse to the sides or edges of the screen. You can also draw shapes with the mouse to trigger specific commands. This application is inspired by Easystroke and the Compiz edge commands, which are two other mouse gesture applications for Linux.

Some of the features of mouse gestures application are:

  • Bind any command execution to a mouse button or wheel event, such as left click, right click, scroll up, or scroll down.
  • Choose whether to execute the command on press, release, or click of the mouse button. You can also prevent the mouse event from being propagated to the underlying application.
  • Use modifier keys, such as shift, Ctrl, or Alt, to modify the mouse gesture and execute different commands.
  • Use screen edges, such as top, left, right, or bottom, to activate mouse gestures. For example, you can scroll up on the left edge of the screen to switch between windows.
  • Draw shapes with the mouse, such as circles, lines, or letters, to execute commands. For example, you can draw a “C” to close the current window.
  • Configure the application with a simple text file, which is automatically reloaded when you make changes to it.
  • Very low resource usage, as the application is lightweight and efficient.

Official Links