Do you mouse with your left hand?
I'm right handed [note 1] but have put the mouse on the left for more years than I want to say.
When mousen were new, my gripe was, "now I need to flop back and forth from the mouse to the Enter/Arrow/etc" cluster, and that's <whine>Just Too Hard</whine>". Then I found that if the mouse is left of the keyboard, under the left hand, here we go!
Never looked back.
Upside: Two-handed driving: (example) websites: bigscale navigation with the mouse, fine tuning with the arrows, and no need to switch hands.
Downside: (example) On Other People's Machines, fancy mousen that are RH-specific don't work when playing "pass the keyboard (and mouse) [note 2]".
Not sure: "It feels natural": So many years that it's only anecdotal.
I seem to see (or used to, pre-Covid!) that left-mousing (regardless of other aspects of 'handedness') is a minority preference.
So, the question: if you have explored this, what has been your experience?
Notes:
[note 1] I have parents and siblings who are left-handed, but I am "right-handed" based on Intertubes(tm) questionnaires, and day-to-day preferences (knife&fork, etc). I guess that there could be some flexibility from that genetic inheritance.
[note 2] I don't use a 'left handed' mouse (it's a vanilla symmetric thing, and cheap!), and I don't swap the buttons (so, all I need to do at the library/kiosk is pull the cable to the other side). I see this as important: maintain 'lowest common denominator' compatibility.
23 comments
[ 2.7 ms ] story [ 60.5 ms ] threadI'll have to give the other-handed mouse a try, see how it goes. Thanks.
Solved it by placing the mouse on the left with the tracking window covered. I have a trackball for the right hand. So I position the cursor my moving the trackball, lift my finger and then click or wheel with the left hand. Can still click with the trackball if my hand is over the keyboard for infrequent operations. Don't have to think about it and no more wrist pain.
No sure if I no longer do this because I switched to a Magic Trackpad or because I no longer work behind my laptop for hours on end.
A theremin emulator would make sense, curious about 'standard' applications.
It does seem a bit weird that my left hand is much more precise with writing and my right hand is much more precise with a mouse, but oh well.
Funny enough my left hand is the hand that started getting finger joint pains. I think it might have been because of hands on the WASD keys for movement in video games had something to do with it, though. I switched to a controller and they seem to slowly be getting better.
Note, by the way, that in both Windows and Linux you can configure the mouse to be "left handed", that is, you can switch the meaning of the buttons, so that you still select with the index finger. (You decide whether that's less confusing, or more...)
- if it's someone else's machine, it's rude to change the settings
- if it's a public machine, it may also be impossible to change the settings.
- regardless, it's easier to just move it than to mess with the settings as well.
I am right handed but changed to mouse with my left.
I am not naturally ambidextrous in the slightest e.g. my left hand cannot be used for writing legibly with pen and paper, and can't really throw a ball very far left handed.
I swapped mouse hands from right to left because of a temporary carpal strain injury.
I was surprised how useful it was having my right hand available for note-taking, etc, that I kept mouse on the left ever since and 20 years later, still going.
Funnily enough I am still excellent mousing with my right hand but never do it by choice nowadays...
Interesting that you like a 'special' (ie., not vanilla symmetric cheap'n'cheerful thing) mouse. I have not yet figured out (after [mumble] years) whether I want a keyboard/mouse setup that fits like a custom glove (the perfect mouse, the perfect keyboard with the perfect layout (colemak or some such), foot pedals for the shift keys, etc (haven't tried that, yet)) or a setup that I can make work for me at any kiosk... or some middle position between those two. Currently I'm at "make it work".
Now about keyboard+mouse combo... Yes, it's a bit awkward to carry Kinesis Advantage 2 + Evoluent mouse around. I actually don't do it unless absolutely necessary. If I would have to work from someplace for a few days, I would just carry laptop :)
I taught myself to use a mouse lefthanded by only playing my favorite game lefthanded. (I won't date myself by telling you what game that was). Within a few weeks it was totally normal for me.
The only downsides are - almost all the new cool mouses / trackballs are right hand designs. And using somebody elses mouse/computer always takes a little effort. It can be very annoying.
I also try using chopsticks left-handed occasionally which wasn't as hard to do as I thought it might be. When playing videogames, I still mouse with my right hand although my left hand is doing all the actions other than point/click--my right hand still has more accuracy. I have no idea how long it would take to develop that and haven't been trying. [Instead I use a custom keyboard layout making myself incompatible with standards.]
Being able to use a computer differently is important, but now I think that most people could fall back to using the touch pad left-handed without much practice.
Edit: I do remember a couple years back I had shooting pains up the back of my right hand for a number of days. I pretty much totally stopped typing/mousing. At work I paired as 'navigator' rather than 'driving'. I eased back into it, first using my left-hand for mousing. When everything seemed normal again, I eventually switched back to my right without much thought.
I do not switch the meaning of mouse buttons.