Touchpad gestures to change workspace

How to change workspaces using touchpad gestures in ubuntu

Complete tutorial using touchegg, easystroke is better to be used with mouse rather than touchpad.

In case you are using unity you may experience some conflicts with build-in gestures. The tutorial I gained information from deals with this issue (please see the link below). I didn't have any build in gestures, so this how-to provides only information how to set up things.

  1. Download Touchegg:

    sudo apt install touchegg
    
  2. run it, but kill just after that, it will create a file

    ~/.config/touchegg/touchegg.conf
    
  3. open it in an editor you desire and add those three lines below into the name="All" section

    <gesture type="DRAG" fingers="3" direction="RIGHT">
       <action type="SEND_KEYS">Control+Alt+Left</action>
    </gesture>
    <gesture type="DRAG" fingers="3" direction="LEFT">
       <action type="SEND_KEYS">Control+Alt+Right</action>
    </gesture>
    
  4. Run touchegg to try it out

    touchegg &
    
  5. Edit the config file as you wish and then add touchegg to the list of startup applications

The tutorial I mentioned can be found here - there some things out of date (you don't have to compile it). Anyway thx to the creator!


Comfortable Swipe

Try comfortable-swipe. Provides 3-finger and 4-finger gestures for switching workspaces, plus a couple more like the window spread in mac.

This also uses xdotool, but more comfy than the laggy libinput-gestures if you ask me.


Your touchpad (hardware) needs to support this feature and you then may need to configure your touchpad (Ubuntu automatically recognizes and enables some hardware).

One common drier is synaptic. You can enable two finger scrolling from the mouse and touchpad section in the control panel.

control panel

If you wish additional options you will need to manually edit a few configuration files and the options are hardware dependent.

There is a debugging page here:

https://wiki.ubuntu.com/DebuggingTouchpadDetection

Take a look at that page, if you can identify your hardware we can perhaps give you more specific assistance.

An example of hardware specific guides: https://wiki.ubuntu.com/Multitouch/AppleMagicTrackpad

Consider easystroke

You can also take a look at "easystroke"

http://sourceforge.net/apps/trac/easystroke/wiki

Here is a demo of easystroke in action: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CagAEgXAAzA