![]() ![]() In most cases, the downloaded dmg file is actually corrupt or had an error downloading. If you see the "no mountable file systems error" while opening a dmg, here's what you should try: The error was as the screenshot above shows trying to open a dmg (disk image), macOS showed the error "no mountable file systems". I didn't find a lot of good search results addressing the issue, so I decided to write up a post about it myself. Here's the download link for Enjoy2 again.I ran into an interesting macOS error while working with a customer. Hope you found this short tutorial useful! You can also take a look at my JSON config file, although it may not be of use to you unless you have my exact controller. Unfortunately, I haven't found a better way to handle this mouse mode issue, but if you have any ideas, I would certainly like to hear them. Every time you open the inventory (circle/B for me), you have to remember to toggle the mouse mode (press R1). I use the right bumper ("R1" in PS3 terminology, I think) for this action. The "Toggle mouse scope" action tells Enjoy2 to switch mouse modes. Because of the way input works on OSX, these two modes require completely different ways of simulating mouse input. The other is the mode where you have the inventory or a chest or a menu open, and you can click on things with a cursor. One is the mode where you don't have a cursor, and moving the mouse moves the camera. The "Toggle mouse scope" action deserves special mention, because it's quite relevant to Minecraft: Minecraft has, essentially, two mouse "modes". Then, as above, you simply select what you want to happen when that button is pressed. These are pretty easy: just press that button on your controller, and the corresponding "Button N" setting is selected. My Axis 3 setting looks like this:įinally, we'll map the rest of the buttons. This will allow you to control the camera smoothly with the right stick, similarly to a console shooter. Since we want analog movement, don't do anything with the High/Low settings on these axes. Similarly, I have mapped Axis 4 / Analog to Mouse movement: Vertical. That means I've selected Axis 3 / Analog, and on the right side, selected Mouse movement: Horizontal. For me, Axis 3 is horizontal and Axis 4 is vertical. Selecting "Analog" only works for mouse control, and means that if you move the axis a little bit off-center, the mouse moves slowly, and if you move the axis all the way to the edge, the mouse moves quickly. For these, since we want to have smooth camera control, we'll select the "Analog" settings on the left. Do the same trick as above to figure out which axes correspond to the right stick-if there are only 4 axes in total, probably the two which you didn't map in the previous section. "High" and "Low" are binary: when the axis (stick) is moved far enough, that action will activate (button will be pressed). Axis 1 is horizontal, so I have Low set to A and High set to D. On my controller, Axis 2 is vertical, so I have Low set to W and High set to S. "High" is activated when you have moved the axis far enough in one direction, and "Low" is activated for the other direction. Finally, choose which key you want to press on the right side, in the box next to "Press a key:". Then, select the "Low" or "High" section of those axes. Move the stick slowly in the horizontal and vertical directions to figure out which one is which axis. Hopefully, you'll see two of the "Axis N" entries open up, like so: On the very right side is a list of configurations, allowing you to set up different mappings for your different games. The various buttons and sticks show up on the left, and what actions they map to show up on the right. With a controller plugged in, you should see something like this: I like to have the left stick mapped to WASD and the right stick mapped to camera movement. The analog sticks are probably the weirdest part of the setup, so let's do that first. (I don't own a PS3: I bought the controller specifically for PC gaming!) Download Enjoy2 here and try it yourself: Left analog stick In the meantime, here's a tutorial on how I set up Enjoy2 to control Minecraft with my aftermarket PS3 controller. I'm not very experienced with OSX programming, though, so the user interface isn't as clear as it could be: the next version of Enjoy2 should hopefully make things a lot easier to use. ![]() I wanted to play Minecraft using a gamepad, like any console FPS, so I updated an open-source project to support mouse emulation and released Enjoy2. I like playing Minecraft, but after playing it for a couple of hours on a small 11-inch laptop, my wrists will start to hurt. ![]()
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