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We have discussed keyboards. But take a look at the small piece of plastic to the right (or left :) ) of your beloved keyboard! This humble creature helps you to draw nice forms, and click all around the web. A real programmers mouse must be precise and comfortable, so which mouse would you make a companion to your keyboard?

Currently I'm in love with this fat member of mice family:
Natural wireless laser mouse 6000
Mouse

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27  
The best mouse is a good set of keyboard shortcuts... – Erik Forbes Jan 16 '09 at 20:05
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closed as not constructive by Mehrdad Afshari, Will Sep 28 '11 at 11:16

This question is not a good fit to our Q&A format. We expect answers to generally involve facts, references, or specific expertise; this question will likely solicit opinion, debate, arguments, polling, or extended discussion. See the FAQ.

58 Answers

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Real Programmers Don't Use Mice

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xkcd.com/378 – Jakub Šturc Sep 30 '08 at 22:10
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Except when they are out of buttlerflies... – levhita Oct 30 '08 at 15:42
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They edit images & icons with a hex editor! :-) – Ferruccio Jan 28 '09 at 0:38
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real programmers vote down your post :P – jcollum May 6 '09 at 15:27
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jcollum: then I'm not a real programmer ;) – Kawa Nov 21 '09 at 11:10
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Logitech MX Revolution alt text

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You got my vote! I love it gyroscopic wheel. – aku Sep 10 '08 at 1:29
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Great mouse, but I had to install uberOptions ( mstar.net/users/rlowens ) to get the most out of it. I also changed the button behind the wheel to be the middle button and don't use the wheel as a button as I found it very stiff (It's still got one more usable button than the MX 1000) – Sam Hasler Sep 10 '08 at 11:16
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I have just bought this mouse based on this answer, and have consigned my Intillimouse Optical to the draw. Thus far, I'm delighted that I did so. – Kramii Jul 10 '09 at 16:05
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uberOptions has moved to: uberoptions.net – jcollum Mar 20 '10 at 21:47
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The Microsoft Intellimouse Optical.

alt text

I've bought about half-a-dozen of these critters over the years, and I just love 'em to death. Five well-placed buttons, a perfectly weighted scroll wheel, and a lovely ambidextrous shape.

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This mouse has sides that slope inwards slightly, which means your hands have to work harder to hold it. It also has a huge BACK button the left side that is easy to bump in to, losing your current web page. Sucks. – Jay Bazuzi Jan 16 '09 at 20:03
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Great mouse -- chunky and robust, with the most tactile wheel I've used. The side buttons are nicely placed for web surfing. – Tim Robinson Feb 28 '09 at 13:23
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I use Logitech MX510:

alt text

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I use it's cousin G5 which is purple and has some grip on it - they're both nice critters. – Ross Sep 28 '08 at 16:44
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While programming I love my Trackpoint. The advantage is, that I don't have to move my hand to reach the mouse. My finger tips can remain on the keyboard.

IBM Trackpoint - The best mouse for programmers

The red point in the picture above is a little joystick to move the courser.

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ah, those things drive me nuts. – nickf Oct 1 '08 at 23:43
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I really wonder when Microsoft will add this to their Natural Ergonomic 4000 model and save us all the pain! – utku_karatas Nov 22 '08 at 2:16
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Those things make it easy to point to the corners and that's about it. – Lance Fisher Nov 25 '08 at 1:25
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@Lance -- That's been my experience too :-) After a few hours of forced trackpoint use I felt like my upper pointer-finger tendon was going to jump out and run away. Never again! – David Citron Apr 6 '09 at 18:03
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I call this the G-spot mouse. (Because it's located next to the G-key). – GvS Jan 26 '10 at 14:06
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I have a Logitech MX 1000 which continues to serve me well. It tracks brilliantly, and never does sudden jumps like optical mice do. Plus, I really like the "cruising" buttons above and below the scroll wheel, which make it very easy to zip to the top or bottom of a web page.

Logitech MX 1000

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Why oh why did they discontinue this mouse :( – ctrlShiftBryan Sep 30 '08 at 14:09
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The "jumping" is generally caused by your mousepad, not mouse – Joe Philllips Jan 16 '09 at 19:52
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For some years now, I've been using one of these TrackMen -- yes, it's a trackball, not a mouse. After a very short time getting used to it, I find it much less annoying then a mouse -- I don't need to find space on my desk to move it!

alt text

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Simple as it gets: Microsoft Wheel Mouse Optical

alt text

  • Not quite as old as my IBM Model M keyboard
  • Feels solid
  • Doesn't have any extra buttons to accidentally press
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I hate how there's a red light at the base of it! Completely superfluous and not even attractive. I used to have one of these on the PC in my bedroom and it drove me nuts. – nickf Feb 9 '10 at 1:31
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I love my Razer DeathAdder.

Razer DeathAdder picture

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It's also much more comfortable and better built than it looks on pictures. And you can turn of the LEDs through the software. – Vasil Apr 6 '09 at 17:48
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Logitech M-UV96
Logitech M-UV96

As simple as they come :)
Best of all, it's really comfortable and precise.

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The Genius Mouse, of course. It came with a mouse pad that doubled as a Xacto cutting board.

alt text

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Some genius sold the company. – Randolpho Feb 27 '09 at 22:06
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Microsoft Trackball Explorer

Microsoft® Trackball Explorer

This is one of the best trackballs, but Microsoft has pulled it out of the market.

  • Trackballs are better than mice because you are moving your finger around instead of your entire arm. Finger muscle moves accurately while your arm is in rested position.
  • Trackballs are better than touchpads or TrackPoints. Trackballs can move the cursor from one end of the screen to the other end in one motion. Aiming specific pixel is easier too. (One advantage of touchpad/TrackPoint is that they tend to be closer to keyboard, but who likes laptop keyboards).

Are all trackballs the same? Not quite.

  • Trackball Explorer is tracked using fingers, not the thumb. Thumb doesn't have much range in motion, and not so good at pointing things, unless you happen to go see gladiators on Sundays.
  • Trackball Explorer has a scroll wheel.
  • Trackball Explorer has big buttons that are programmable. Logitech's Cordless TrackMan Optical meets the above criteria, but the buttuns are too small.
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Lifehacker covered this recently: http://lifehacker.com/5054519/the-best-mouse-youve-ever-had

I quite like the idea of a vertical mouse:

Evolent mouse

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Logitech MX620 Cordless Laser

Logitech MX620 Cordless Laser - very comfortable and precise, great battery life so far. It's my first wireless mouse and I'm surprised how great it works.

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Blue Track from Microsoft.

No laser!

alt text

You can see detail here.

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I always wanted to use my mouse on a unfinished park bench! – James McMahon Jan 9 '09 at 18:24
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I've always used an Intellimouse Explorer 3.0, ever since my Counter-Strike days. Just the right amount of buttons for me and fits my hand nicely.

Intellimouse Image

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I love my Microsoft Trackball Optical...

alt text

The key factor here, reprogramming those small buttons to copy and paste respectively. Increased my productivity 3 fold.

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The Logitech G7 - Awesome sensitivity (in multiple modes depending on the situation's need for precision or speed) and two batteries for quick swapping and no downtime.

G7

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ohh duuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuude that looks so hot i think i need some quiet time to reflect on the new love of my life :P – anon271334 Nov 12 '10 at 19:32
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The Logitech VX Nano, the younger brother of the MX Revolution. vx nano

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Looks like that receiver could be a PITA to remove once plugged in! – alex Apr 21 '10 at 14:12
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The Kensington Expert Mouse, which is (rather confusingly) actually a trackball.

A picture of said trackball

I used to get pains in my right index finger from mouse clicking, so I switched the mouse buttons to left-handed. That worked for a while, until I got pains in my right middle finger as well. Despite trying, I can't get on with a mouse in my left hand. So I decided to go with an amidextrous trackball, on the grounds that since I couldn't use a trackball with either hand, I'd be learning from scratch either way. The Expert Mouse was the first trackball I found that:

  1. Could be used in either hand
  2. Had a scroll wheel

It turned out to be a great decision - After a week, I was just as quick as I was with a mouse, and after 18 months neither hand gives me any problems. I love it, and don't really see any room for improvement.

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I really want to try one of these, but I don't think they are in mass production yet.

Combimouse

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Having a hard time picturing how I'd use it... – MarkPowell Nov 11 '09 at 13:06
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The point is you dont have to move your right hand between mouse and keyboard. – Kugel Aug 10 '10 at 13:48
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Kensington Orbit® Optical Trackball

alt text

Symmetrical so you can swap sides every couple months to fight RSS (that's Repetitive Stress Syndrome). Not sure it's a drawback: Just two buttons... so you'll need to use the Ctrl key, too.

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@aku

Natural Wireless Laser Mouse 6000

I have been using the same mouse for about 4 months and love it. Was a little odd at first, but great as soon as I got used to it.

alt text

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Intellimouse 4.0 Intellimouse 4.0. Very comfy mouse, works very well on almost any surface. scrollwheel very good for normal use, but very bad for changing weapons - I bound the side buttons on mine.

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My preference is to not use the mouse. But when neeeded, I prefer to use a tablet from Wacom (currently the previous generation Intuos3 A5) or a good trackball.

Wacom Intuos3 A5

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I like my logitech mx518. Basically, i like high resolution mice so i don't have to move my hand very much.

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Absolutely love my Logitech G9.

The free wheeling scroll has helped a lot with the little niggling pains I used to get in my index finger.

Fully customisable X and Y speeds, adjustable on the fly, so can switch from high speed text editor mousing to ultra slow precision for image editing in a matter of seconds.

Not too many buttons, weight adjustable, and it rocks for gaming too.

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this might be worth a try for those button addicts out there...

alt text

featuring...
- 18 programmable mouse buttons with double-click functionality
- Three different button modes: Key, Keypress, and Macro
- Analog Xbox 360-style joystick with optional 4, 8, and 16-key command modes
- Clickable scroll wheel
- 512k of flash memory
- 63 on-mouse application profiles with hardware, software, and autoswitching capability
- 1024-character macro support.
- Open source support software for creating, managing, and customizing application profiles
- Import and export of custom profiles in XML format
- Optional audio notification of profile switching with customizable wave files
- PDF export of profile button assignments
- Adjustable resolution from 400 to 1,600 CPI
- 20 default profiles for popular games and applications, including OpenOffice.org 3.1, Adobe Photoshop, the Gnu Image Manipulation Program, World of Warcraft, and the Call of Duty series.
link text

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For what little mousing I actually have to do, this has suited me perfectly.

alt text

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