The scroll wheel is placed horizontally between the mouse buttons and commonly uses vertical scrolling, wherein rolling the wheel from the bottom side to the top is known as scrolling "upward" or "forward", while the reverse, i.e. rolling the wheel from the top side to the bottom, is known as scrolling "downward" or "backward". In a
graphical user interface, the "upward" motion moves contents of the window downward (and the
scrollbar thumb, if present, upward), and vice versa. In other configurations (sometimes called "natural scrolling") the effect is inverted. On most mice, the scroll wheel can often also be used as a third, middle
mouse button by pressing down on it, known as the
scroll button. Some mice's scroll wheels can scroll horizontally by
tilting them to the left or right, or there may be additional wheel on a perpendicular axis located elsewhere on the mouse. The wheel is often, but not always, engineered with
detents to turn in discrete steps, rather than continuously as an analog axis, to allow the operator to more easily intuit how far they are scrolling. Scroll wheels are prevalent on modern computer mice and have become an integral part of the
hardware interface. However, non-wheeled mice are still available. Some user interfaces, like
Cinnamon (desktop environment), allow using it to adjust
brightness and
volume by pointing at the respective taskbar icon while scrolling. == History ==