By default, Ubuntu uses a two-finger tap for right-click and a three-finger tap for middle-click on laptop touchpads. You can swap this behavior, but Ubuntu doesn’t provide a graphical utility for configuring it.
Swapping this behavior is simple and only involves running a command or two — however, making your changes persistent requires creating a script and telling GNOME to automatically run it when the system boots or resumes from suspend.
Image Credit: Michael Mol on Flickr
Swap Two Finger & Three Finger Taps
Launch a terminal and run the following command to swap the tap behavior:
These synclient commands tell “TapButton2” (two-finger tap) to produce action 2 (middle-click) and “TapButton3” (three-finger tap) to produce action 3 (right-click).
After running these commands, your tap gestures will be reversed. However, this setting isn’t persistent across system restarts or suspend and wake cycles.
Making Your Configuration Persistent
To make this setting persistent, you’ll have to create a special script and tell GNOME to run it. You can’t just add the script to your startup applications or Ubuntu will overwrite the touchpad’s settings when your system from suspend.
To create the script, open a text editor such as Gedit, which you can launch from the Dash.
Add the commands used above to a new text file like so:
Save the file with the .sh file extension — for example, you could name it touchpad.sh.
After you’ve saved the file, launch a terminal and run the following command to make your new script executable, replacing /home/name/touchpad.sh with the path to your script:
Next, run the following command — replacing /home/name/touchpad.sh with the path to your script — to tell GNOME to run your script whenever an input device is connected (for example, when your system boots or resumes from suspend). This makes your settings persisent: