By your definition of a "scientific mind" one would never be able to reason about future events because there's not yet any evidence for them. Iron-clad deductive syllogisms are rare in the real world, outside of books on formal logic. Without evidence one looks like a man with knuckle bones in a It's called inductive reasoning. It doesn't matter that the dogs been eating that for years with no problems. My partner always blames whatever the dog sicks up on what made it sick. It isn't helpful to anyone to send them off on wild goose chases when you have 0 evidence for the assumption. Well, that is a wild stab, I can debunk that immediately. Over the years, windows has had problems with any/all non-MS non-basic mouse drivers. Where to start troubleshooting - What mouse and which drivers? What did (does) was changing the viewport display mode (e.g. That did not fix the mouse pointer problem for me. from LMB to RMB) and the mouse pointer now also reappears once you exit whatever mode you were in (by releasing the MB/keys).ĭid that make any sense? In summary: to avoid losing the mouse pointer, use keyboard shortcuts with the mouse to control viewport views instead of the viewport icons.Īlso, I didn't understand what was meant by fixing the problem by (blindly) clicking on one of the viewport tabs. in my case, press LMB while on rotate icon, then while holding LMB press and hold ctrl+alt), the program behavior changes to allow for mode transitioning (by changing e.g. If you entered a view control mode via a corresponding viewport icon, then switch seamlessly to the same mode with shortcut keys (e.g. if previously holding LMB, press RMB, then let go of LMB). as long as the MB you're holding down and the keys you are pressing would enter the same view control mode as the one activated by the correspondingh MB-icon combination, you would stay in that mode (rather than exiting/re-entering, which might incur a given delay, depending on the display/rendering settings, complexity, etc.) but program behavior is now governed by behavior resulting from the shortcut-MB combo: unlike with viewport icon-induced modes, you can now transition directly into other modes by keeping the key combination pressed and then transitioning to the other MB (e.g. More importantly, it appears that the bug in the software lies in this section of code - because unlike with the viewport control icons, the pointer does return once view control mode is exited - regardless of what (sequence of) mouse button(s) is pressed.Īlso, you can switch from icons to shortcuts seamlessly e.g. When I use the keyboard shortcuts instead of the viewport icons, the program behaves slightly differently: when one of the modes is activated by pressing/holding either combination of keyboard keys and LMB/RMB, if the other mouse button is then pressed while still in the previous mode, the program switches to the new mode that would result from the new keyboard/MB combination. The combinations can be set from workspace customization under the "Windows" menu item, or by pressing F3 (at the bottom, under viewport shortcuts). the translate or rotate icon) can be avoided if you use a keyboard shortcut-equivalent (in my case, which may not be default/factory setting, the keys are as follows: CTRL+ALT, LMB to orbit/RMB to rotate CTRL+SHIFT: LMB to pan/RMB to dolly). The mouse pointer disappearance while accessing a view control via one of the viewport modifier icons (e.g.
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