![]() I won’t say this solves a hassle in the strictest sense of the word, but it does make scrolling in Google Chrome a lot cooler. If you own an iPhone or iPad, it’s the same sort of “bounce” that happens while scrolling in Safari and other apps. ![]() The extension adds one other cool effect: a “bouncy edge” when you scroll to the top or bottom of a Web page. The adjustments are reflected in real-time. (These same settings can be adjusted for your keyboard.) What’s nice is that you can immediately test out the changes you make no need to restart, refresh, or anything like that. Smooth is smooth, and non-smooth jumps at least 50 lines for each click of the mouse scroll wheel. ![]() That said, smooth scrolling vs non-smooth scrolling are VASTLY different here. You’ll see here that you can adjust Step Size (how far the page scrolls for each “tick” of the mouse wheel), Smoothness (essentially how quickly scrolling starts and ends), and Acceleration Sensitivity. This brings you a comfortable reading experience with smooth scroll of necessary amount of webpage by pressing an assigned key. The smooth scroll function is based on the UI code, and Chromium UI and Vivaldi UI are different ( very different) things entirely. Features - iOS-like smooth scrolling - Mouse wheel, middle mouse and keyboard support - Arrow keys, PgUp/PgDown, Spacebar, Home/End - Customizable step sizes, frames per second and more. Chromium Wheel Smooth Scroller adds a little wheel icon to the browser (look to the right edge of the address bar) right-click it and choose Options. Of course, half the fun lies in tweaking the settings to make your mouse wheel just the way you like it.
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