On 07/29/2016 11:11 AM, Doug wrote:
> 
> On 07/29/2016 10:34 AM, thomas cameron wrote:
>> On 07/28/2016 06:52 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>> FWIW, my Acer Laptop reports "Couldn't find synaptics properties.  No
>>> synaptics driver
>>> loaded?" when using "synclient -l".  Yet my touchpad works just
>>> fine.  KDE has a setting
>>> for disabling the touchpad, but it doesn't work. Lucky for me my
>>> laptop has a "Fn+F7" key
>>> combination which turns off the touchpad hardware wise.
>> Thanks, Ed!
>>
>> Mine is a Synaptics, and it works great with "synclient TouchpadOff=1"
>> so I think I'm good!
>>
>> TC
>> -
> There used to be a program called synaptik--notice the spelling--that
> would turn the scratchpad off.
> See if you can find it anywhere.

Here's a script I "appropriated" that works on my Dell laptop:

------------------------ CUT HERE ------------------------------------
#!/bin/bash
# toggleTouchpad by Brendon Dugan
# Toggles a touchpad on or off depending on it's current state or CLI
# argument
#
# To configure, run the command 'xinput list' in terminal and identify
# your touch pad.
#
# Using the output of the above command, change the touchpadString
# variable to a substring of your touchpad's description that is unique
# to that device.
#
# To run, simply type 'toggleTouchpad' to toggle your touchpad on or
# off, or 'toggleTouchpad on' to explicitly turn your touchpad on, or
# 'toggleTouchpad off' to explicitly turn it off.
#
# Enjoy!
#
# Note from Rick Stevens: "My laptop uses an AlpsPS/2 touchpad, not a
# Synaptics one, so that's why the string below is what it is."
touchpadString="AlpsPS/2 ALPS GlidePoint"
touchpadID=$(xinput list | grep "$touchpadString" | awk -F " " '{print
$7}' | awk -F "=" '{print $2}')
touchpadEnabled=$(xinput list-props $touchpadID | grep "Device Enabled"
| awk -F ":" '{print $2}')
        
# Check for arguments on the command line
if [ $# -eq 1 ]; then                           # Any arguments?
    arg1=$(echo $1 | tr [:upper:] [:lower:])    # Yes, convert to lower case
    cliArg=1                                    # Set flag that we have one
else                                            # There is no argument.
    cliArg=0                                    # Clear flag
fi

if [ $cliArg -eq 1 ]; then                      # Did we get an argument?
    if [ $arg1 = 'on' ]; then                   # Yes, was it "on"?
        xinput --set-prop $touchpadID "Device Enabled" 1
                                                # Yes, enable the touchpad
    elif [ $arg1 = 'off' ]; then                # No, was it "off"?
        xinput --set-prop $touchpadID "Device Enabled" 0
                                                # Yes, disable the touchpad
    else                                        # None of the above, so...
        sleep 1                                 # ...sleep one second, exit
    fi

else                                            # No argument, toggle state
    if [ $touchpadEnabled -eq 1 ]; then         # Enabled now?
        xinput --set-prop $touchpadID "Device Enabled" 0
                                                # Yes, so disable it
    else                                        # Must be disabled, so...
        xinput --set-prop $touchpadID "Device Enabled" 1
                                                # ...enable it
    fi
fi

------------------------ CUT HERE ------------------------------------

This is saved as "/usr/local/bin/toggleTouchpad", mode 755 and owned by
root:root (/usr/local/bin is part of all of my users' PATHs).
----------------------------------------------------------------------
- Rick Stevens, Systems Engineer, AllDigital    ri...@alldigital.com -
- AIM/Skype: therps2        ICQ: 226437340           Yahoo: origrps2 -
-                                                                    -
-           Vegetarian:  Old Indian word for "lousy hunter"          -
----------------------------------------------------------------------
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