[comp.unix.aix] getting the mouse to cooperate with pcsim

mackenzi@mrlaxa.mrl.uiuc.edu (Andrew MacKenzie) (06/07/91)

I was wondering if anyone has had success with getting the mouse to cooperate 
with pcsim.  If so, could you post how you did it, or better, email me how
you did it?  

I have some applications which would benefit from the mouse, but I can't get
it to work...


Andrew MacKenzie
am26613@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu
mackenzie@uiucmrl.bitnet

rsargent@alias.com (Richard Sargent) (06/10/91)

In article <1991Jun7.033522.20839@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu> mackenzi@mrlaxa.mrl.uiuc.edu (Andrew MacKenzie) writes:
>I was wondering if anyone has had success with getting the mouse to cooperate 
>with pcsim.  If so, could you post how you did it, or better, email me how
>you did it?  
>
>I have some applications which would benefit from the mouse, but I can't get
>it to work...
>

Believe it or not, put this in your 'simprof' file:

	mouse : com1


You would never guess that from TFM :-(

eravin@panix.uucp (Ed Ravin) (06/11/91)

In article <1991Jun7.033522.20839@ux1.cso.uiuc.edu>
mackenzi@mrlaxa.mrl.uiuc.edu (Andrew MacKenzie) writes:

>I was wondering if anyone has had success with getting the mouse to cooperate 
>with pcsim.  If so, could you post how you did it, or better, email me how
>you did it?  

You have to put "mouse : com1" (or com2) in your simprof file.  I was then
able to put MOUSE.COM (for Mickeysoft mice) into the stimulated PC's
CONFIG.SYS and it all worked (at least for the one app that I tried it out
on).

a couple of notes:

Don't use tabs in the "simprof" file.  It doesn't like them.  And # signs work
for commenting out lines when you're experimenting.

There's a little weirdness with the relationship between the mouse cursor
and the Xwindows cursor -- when you move the mouse to the PC window, the
cursor disappears unless the PC has an active mouse app running.  To see
the cursor, hold down the shift (or was it the alt?) key and click.  The
real weirdness is that the PC and the X cursor don't track perfectly together.
You can get into situations where you can't manipulate the PC mouse pointer
because you keep "falling off the end" into the X background, even when the
PC mouse is in the middle of the screen.  Turns out that it matters where
the "border crossing" is made -- first raise the X mouse to the same
elevation as the frozen PC mouse pointer, then shift it into the PC window.
-- 
Ed Ravin            | I'm sorry, sir, but POSTAL REGULATIONS don't allow
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