Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
67 lines (46 loc) · 2.22 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

67 lines (46 loc) · 2.22 KB

WacomDisplayMap

Easily map a Wacom graphics tablet to a display, without having to muck through a bunch of device lists.

Authors

  • Jason C. McDonald (CodeMouse92)

Compatibility

This should work on any Debian-based system, and may also work on other Linux systems. It is designed to work automatically with any graphics tablet that can be controlled by xsetwacom.

If you encounter any problems with any Linux system or Wacom tablet, please report in Issues!

History

Many Ubuntu systems include a control panel for Wacom graphics tablets, but some popular distributions (including Ubuntu MATE) don't. This handy script allows you to quickly map your Wacom tablet to any connected display.

Prerequisites

You must have the package pcregrep installed on your system, which should be available from your system's default package repository. You should also have xsetwacom on your system, which is usually pre-installed on Ubuntu by default.

Installation

Simply place the wacommap file in a convenient place for scripts, and be sure the location is included in your environment path. Mark the script as executable via chmod +x wacommap.

Here's an example install, placing the script in your /usr/local/bin directory. Note that we only need the sudo because we're working in a system directory.

# Move to the location where the script will live.
$ cd /usr/local/bin
# Download the script file from GitHub directly.
$ sudo wget https://github.com/CodeMouse92/WacomDisplayMap/raw/main/wacommap
# Make the script executable. (You are encouraged to read the file BEFORE doing this, so you know what it does.
$ sudo chmod +x wacommap
# Run the script.
$ wacommap

Usage

Simply run wacommap to start the script.

First, it will search for compatible Wacom devices. If you receive the message...

No Wacom stylus or eraser detected.

...be sure you've connected your Wacom graphics tablet to your computer.

Next, it will automatically detect all connected displays. If only one display is detected, it will automatically select it. Otherwise, if multiple displays are detected, it will list them and prompt you to select one.

The script will then map all compatible connected Wacom devices to the selected display.