Mozilla サポートの検索

Avoid support scams. We will never ask you to call or text a phone number or share personal information. Please report suspicious activity using the “Report Abuse” option.

詳しく学ぶ

このスレッドはアーカイブに保管されました。 必要であれば新たに質問してください。

Stopping the scroll of a webpage causes a click

  • 3 件の返信
  • 1 人がこの問題に困っています
  • 1 回表示
  • 最後の返信者: Null User Value

more options

Around 20% of the time I try to stop a webpage scrolling it results in a “click” on the page wherever my thumb lands.

It happens on occasions that the page continues to scroll slightly when I lift my thumb off. I’ve looked through the setting and can’t see anything that might help.

Around 20% of the time I try to stop a webpage scrolling it results in a “click” on the page wherever my thumb lands. It happens on occasions that the page continues to scroll slightly when I lift my thumb off. I’ve looked through the setting and can’t see anything that might help.

すべての返信 (3)

more options

Some clarification on your problem, you're encountering 2 issues:

  1. An accidental 'tap' is resulted sometimes when you're trying to stop a webpage that is scrolling
  2. When you lift your thumb at your preferred/designated location on the web page, it continues to scroll slightly

Are these your problems?

more options

1. Correct

2. The unintended click occurs seeming when take my thumb straight off after the scrolling has stopped. I have to quite deliberately stop the page scrolling completely to prevent a click occurring.

more options

Hi Matt,

This isn't a setting with the Firefox app. The app just uses the input given to it by the OS (which gets its information from the hardware/screen).

So in this case you might look into adjusting one of the iOS settings related to tap vs. touch.

Go to Settings > General > Accessibility > Touch Accommodations > Ignore Repeat

Toggle this on (so you see the green) try increasing the amount to 0.15 Seconds

Scroll back up to the top and toggle on Touch Accommodations, then try using Firefox to see what the result it.

Also, if you're using any screen protector then you have a much higher chance of misread inputs/touches/taps. I let myself get roped into being my office's company phone fix-it person, and the most frequent issue was that the screen wasn't working (iOS and Android). Almost without fail it was due to the screen protectors, from the cheapest sheets of plastic to the $200 'sapphire' moldings, they all caused problems.

And not that this is extremely helpful right now, but sometimes the capacitive touch screen starts to fail and causes odd and seemingly random issues.