Trackpad gestures
For more information about these gestures, choose Apple menu > System Preferences, then click Trackpad. You can turn a gesture off, change the type of gesture, and learn which gestures work with your Mac.
Two-finger scrolling does not work in either app in Safe Mode. I followed the steps and ran the automated troubleshooter (the longer, Online version). This ended up uninstalling and re-installing Microsoft Office. I let it do this, and then tried again. Two-finger scrolling still does not work on either app. Update The Touchpad Drivers (Recommended) Updating the drivers is probably the best. If you hold down both the Control and Option keys, and then scroll using the mouse (for me it is two fingers on the MacBook Pro's track pad), you'll change the zoom level on the Excel sheet.
Two Finger Scroll Not Working In Excel For Macbook Pro
Trackpad gestures require a Magic Trackpad or built-in Multi-Touch trackpad. If your trackpad supports Force Touch, you can also Force click and get haptic feedback.
Secondary click (right-click)
Click or tap with two fingers.
Smart zoom
Double-tap with two fingers to zoom in and back out of a webpage or PDF.
Zoom in or out
Pinch with two fingers to zoom in or out.
Rotate
Move two fingers around each other to rotate a photo or other item.
Two Finger Scroll Not Working In Excel For Mac Shortcut
Swipe between pages
Swipe left or right with two fingers to show the previous or next page.
Open Notification Center
Swipe left from the right edge with two fingers to show Notification Center.
Three finger drag
Use three fingers to drag items on your screen, then click or tap to drop. Symmetryshop serial code. Turn on this feature in Accessibility preferences.
Look up and data detectors
Tap with three fingers to look up a word or take actions with dates, addresses, phone numbers, and other data.
Show desktop
Spread your thumb and three fingers apart to show your desktop.
Launchpad
Pinch your thumb and three fingers together to display Launchpad.
Mission Control
Swipe up with four fingers2 to open Mission Control.
App Exposé
Swipe down with four fingers2 to see all windows of the app you're using.
Swipe between full-screen apps
Swipe left or right with four fingers2 to move between desktops and full-screen apps.
Mouse gestures
For more information about these gestures, choose Apple menu > System Preferences, then click Mouse. There you can turn a gesture off, change the type of gesture, and learn which gestures work with your Mac. Mouse gestures require a Magic Mouse.
Secondary click (right-click)
Click the right side of the mouse.
Smart zoom
Double-tap with one finger to zoom in and back out of a webpage or PDF.
Mission Control
Double-tap with two fingers to open Mission Control.
Swipe between full-screen apps
Swipe left or right with two fingers to move between desktops and full-screen apps.
Swipe between pages
Swipe left or right with one finger to show the previous or next page.
1. You can turn off trackpad scrolling in Accessibility preferences.
2. In some versions of macOS, this gesture uses three fingers instead of four.
2016-11-21 Update for Windows 10
Mac users are familiar with Two-Finger Scrolling feature. You can place two fingers on the mouse track pad and you're able to scroll content on the screen. Since Mac OS X 10.6 Apple changed direction of scrolling to match gestures used on tablets or phones. It's interesting that for more than decade scrolling was done in opposite direction. When you swiped down then the content was scrolling up. Many users were confused after switch, but it quickly became natural.
Lenovo notebook has also support for multitouch gestures and scrolling by two fingers. The only problem is that default installation, behave the same way like old Mac OS. It's reversed. When you need to switch between Mac and Lenovo then it's quite confusing. Fortunately it's possible to configure it just by few clicks.
Windows 10
Search for Mouse & touchpad settings (press Window and type for word mouse):
Open Mouse & touchpad settings and in section Related Settings click Additional mouse options (bottom of screen).
Open UltraNav tab and click TouchPad Settings…
Click Scrolling in Select an item. Click Two-Finger Scrolling in the menu. Check: Enable reverse scrolling direction
Windows 7 and older UltraNav
Search for Mouse configuration (press Window and type word mouse):
Open UltraNav tab and click TouchPad Settings…
Click Scrolling in Select an item. Check: Enable reverse scrolling direction
Click OK and Two-Finger Scrolling should behave the same way like Mac OS. :-)
Two-finger scrolling does not work in either app in Safe Mode. I followed the steps and ran the automated troubleshooter (the longer, Online version). This ended up uninstalling and re-installing Microsoft Office. I let it do this, and then tried again. Two-finger scrolling still does not work on either app. Update The Touchpad Drivers (Recommended) Updating the drivers is probably the best. If you hold down both the Control and Option keys, and then scroll using the mouse (for me it is two fingers on the MacBook Pro's track pad), you'll change the zoom level on the Excel sheet.
Two Finger Scroll Not Working In Excel For Macbook Pro
Trackpad gestures require a Magic Trackpad or built-in Multi-Touch trackpad. If your trackpad supports Force Touch, you can also Force click and get haptic feedback.
Secondary click (right-click)
Click or tap with two fingers.
Smart zoom
Double-tap with two fingers to zoom in and back out of a webpage or PDF.
Zoom in or out
Pinch with two fingers to zoom in or out.
Rotate
Move two fingers around each other to rotate a photo or other item.
Two Finger Scroll Not Working In Excel For Mac Shortcut
Swipe between pages
Swipe left or right with two fingers to show the previous or next page.
Open Notification Center
Swipe left from the right edge with two fingers to show Notification Center.
Three finger drag
Use three fingers to drag items on your screen, then click or tap to drop. Symmetryshop serial code. Turn on this feature in Accessibility preferences.
Look up and data detectors
Tap with three fingers to look up a word or take actions with dates, addresses, phone numbers, and other data.
Show desktop
Spread your thumb and three fingers apart to show your desktop.
Launchpad
Pinch your thumb and three fingers together to display Launchpad.
Mission Control
Swipe up with four fingers2 to open Mission Control.
App Exposé
Swipe down with four fingers2 to see all windows of the app you're using.
Swipe between full-screen apps
Swipe left or right with four fingers2 to move between desktops and full-screen apps.
Mouse gestures
For more information about these gestures, choose Apple menu > System Preferences, then click Mouse. There you can turn a gesture off, change the type of gesture, and learn which gestures work with your Mac. Mouse gestures require a Magic Mouse.
Secondary click (right-click)
Click the right side of the mouse.
Smart zoom
Double-tap with one finger to zoom in and back out of a webpage or PDF.
Mission Control
Double-tap with two fingers to open Mission Control.
Swipe between full-screen apps
Swipe left or right with two fingers to move between desktops and full-screen apps.
Swipe between pages
Swipe left or right with one finger to show the previous or next page.
1. You can turn off trackpad scrolling in Accessibility preferences.
2. In some versions of macOS, this gesture uses three fingers instead of four.
2016-11-21 Update for Windows 10
Mac users are familiar with Two-Finger Scrolling feature. You can place two fingers on the mouse track pad and you're able to scroll content on the screen. Since Mac OS X 10.6 Apple changed direction of scrolling to match gestures used on tablets or phones. It's interesting that for more than decade scrolling was done in opposite direction. When you swiped down then the content was scrolling up. Many users were confused after switch, but it quickly became natural.
Lenovo notebook has also support for multitouch gestures and scrolling by two fingers. The only problem is that default installation, behave the same way like old Mac OS. It's reversed. When you need to switch between Mac and Lenovo then it's quite confusing. Fortunately it's possible to configure it just by few clicks.
Windows 10
Search for Mouse & touchpad settings (press Window and type for word mouse):
Open Mouse & touchpad settings and in section Related Settings click Additional mouse options (bottom of screen).
Open UltraNav tab and click TouchPad Settings…
Click Scrolling in Select an item. Click Two-Finger Scrolling in the menu. Check: Enable reverse scrolling direction
Windows 7 and older UltraNav
Search for Mouse configuration (press Window and type word mouse):
Open UltraNav tab and click TouchPad Settings…
Click Scrolling in Select an item. Check: Enable reverse scrolling direction
Click OK and Two-Finger Scrolling should behave the same way like Mac OS. :-)