imwheel
imwheel is a tool for tweaking mouse wheel behavior, on a per-program basis. It can map mousewheel input to keyboard input, increase mousewheel speed, and has support for modifier keys.
Contents
Installation
imwheel is available from AUR imwheelAUR or directly from The sourceforge page.
Configuration
The official HTML documentation (manpage) is available in the official website.
imwheel matches window class strings with regular expressions for deciding which windows to apply tweaks to.
Getting the window class string
Run xprop to get the class string. The program will exit when a window is clicked.
xprop WM_CLASS | grep -o '"[^"]*"' | head -n 1
So for the document viewer zathura, this will return the following:
"zathura"
Edit your configuration file
Create or edit ~/.imwheelrc
. In this configuration file lines can be added for each program you want to tweak mousewheel behavior for. The following example will increase the mousewheel speed for the document viewer zathura:
# Speed up scrolling for the document viewer "^zathura$" None, Up, Button4, 4 None, Down, Button5, 4
Up
and Down
may be used in the place of Button4
and Button5
respectively for the mousewheel.
Matching all programs (using ".*") can cause unwanted behaviour in some programs; since imwheel emulates multiple scroll actions for each one the user makes, programs that have actions bound to the mousewheel will perform those actions more times than expected.
For example, terminal emulators in which scrolling selects commands from the history will jump multiple items per scroll.
imwheel catches modifier keys for monitored mouse buttons, for passing them further you need to explicitly configure it to do so. In example below Left Control
used with mousewheel is passed to chromium for zoom function without multiplying:
# Speed up scrolling for chromium and pass unchanged for zoom "^chromium$" None, Up, Button4, 4 None, Down, Button5, 4 Shift_L, Up, Shift_L|Button4, 4 Shift_L, Down, Shift_L|Button5, 4 Control_L, Up, Control_L|Button4 Control_L, Down, Control_L|Button5
Run imwheel
Run imwheel simply like so:
imwheel
The program will print its PID and run in the background. You may wish to run imwheel in a startup script.