So I like this MacOS feature where your cursor displays in large. I was hoping if anyone knew of such software that replicates this functionality for Linux. Considering MacOS and Linux are both Unix, and libraries are different, could X or Wayland help replicate this?

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    • @lankybiker
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      99 months ago

      Well you win, this looks like exactly what’s been asked for. Seems pretty cool will give it a try

      • Yuumi
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        -59 months ago

        Gnome is a desktop environment for Linux. It does not come with gnome out of the box and needs to be installed by the user as it is a extension.

  • Limitless_screaming
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    9 months ago

    KDE Plasma has a desktop effect called “Track Mouse” after you activate it you can use it by pressing Ctrl+Meta. It doesn’t look like the MacOS variant, but it does the job.

    • @waigl
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      129 months ago

      Thanks for pointing that out, I found the setting on my laptop and tried it out. I do like the jiggle approach better, though, simply because that is something many people (myself included) instinctively do when losing track of the mouse cursor.

      • Limitless_screaming
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        109 months ago

        I just added it because the current answer (jiggle) is a Gnome shell extension. So this is just my answer for Plasma.

  • DreamButt
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    349 months ago

    Such an underrated feature

    • Centillionaire
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      139 months ago

      Apple software team is on another level. You don’t even have to try to find the feature. We all instinctively shake the mouse to locate the cursor, so it just happens.

  • Skull giver
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    39 months ago

    It depends on your desktop environment. For GNOME, you can try jiggle. For me, Jiggle is listed as incompatible, unfortunately.

    The built-in accessibility setting for finding your mouse is the Windows-style “press left ctrl to highlight the mouse”. KDE has the same feature, though they’re working on including a macOS-like jiggle feature in the upcoming Plasma 6 release.

  • @[email protected]
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    -29 months ago

    On my Mac running yabai it sometimes gets into this weird state where the mouse does this as it toggles rapidly back and forth between some windows. No idea what causes it…

    On Linux I run i3 which kinda negates the need for the mouse finder since it will move the cursor to the active window.

    I guess I didn’t remotely answer you question though!

    • @waigl
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      199 months ago

      FWIW, this entire comment section:

      https://lemmy.world/post/1940961?scrollToComments=true

      Back to the to the topic, yes, Linux is not technically Unix by pedigree. In practice, it doesn’t matter that it isn’t and it wouldn’t matter if it were, both for this issue in particular and for most others you are likely to encounter.

      The actually relevant technology here is the graphics subsystem, and MacOS’s Cocoa has always been radically different from anything else in the Unix/Linux space. There is no relation whatsoever to either X11 or Wayland. The only thing worth “porting” here is the basic idea. Which is pretty neat, though. Let’s hope Apple hasn’t patented it.

        • @waigl
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          49 months ago

          If it was, I don’t think it was a default. I had been using Windows 7 for quite a while back in the day, and I cannot remember ever seeing something like this. On the other hand, I can certainly remember losing track of where on my monitors my mouse cursor was on various occasions…

          • Unaware7013
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            9 months ago

            IIRC, the windows version of this is a setting where you can hit CTRL and it makes a moderately large circle that contracts towards the pointer. It’s been in since at least W7/Vista, possibly XP. I’ve used it on and off for years (especially with 3 27" monitors) because of how easy it is to lose the cursor.

            • @Dexx1s
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              29 months ago

              And that functionality is in Gnome, but disabled by default IIRC. I’ve had it on for years in both PopOS and Debian so I may be wrong but I do believe it’s a Gnome feature.

        • L3ft_F13ld!
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          19 months ago

          I know Windows has the option to shake a window and all other windows get minimised. Nothing like shaking the mouse to find the cursor, though.

      • @kbotc
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        19 months ago

        Quartz is the old macOS graphics framework, but the mouse shaking is probably just a cool show off feature of Core Animation. There’s uncontested Windows ports on GitHub, so I doubt Apple will throw any fits for Linux.