diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'contrib/ncurses/man/curs_mouse.3x')
-rw-r--r-- | contrib/ncurses/man/curs_mouse.3x | 80 |
1 files changed, 51 insertions, 29 deletions
diff --git a/contrib/ncurses/man/curs_mouse.3x b/contrib/ncurses/man/curs_mouse.3x index 316598a..8211ef8 100644 --- a/contrib/ncurses/man/curs_mouse.3x +++ b/contrib/ncurses/man/curs_mouse.3x @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ '\" t .\"*************************************************************************** -.\" Copyright (c) 1998,1999,2000 Free Software Foundation, Inc. * +.\" Copyright (c) 1998-2001,2002 Free Software Foundation, Inc. * .\" * .\" Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a * .\" copy of this software and associated documentation files (the * @@ -27,7 +27,7 @@ .\" authorization. * .\"*************************************************************************** .\" -.'" $Id: curs_mouse.3x,v 1.15 2000/07/08 12:50:08 tom Exp $ +.\" $Id: curs_mouse.3x,v 1.19 2002/02/16 22:39:04 tom Exp $ .TH curs_mouse 3X "" .SH NAME \fBgetmouse\fR, \fBungetmouse\fR, @@ -67,19 +67,23 @@ MEVENT;\fR .br .SH DESCRIPTION These functions provide an interface to mouse events from -\fBncurses\fR(3X). Mouse events are represented by \fBKEY_MOUSE\fR +\fBncurses\fR(3X). +Mouse events are represented by \fBKEY_MOUSE\fR pseudo-key values in the \fBwgetch\fR input stream. -To make mouse events visible, use the \fBmousemask\fR function. This will set -the mouse events to be reported. By default, no mouse events are reported. +To make mouse events visible, use the \fBmousemask\fR function. +This will set +the mouse events to be reported. +By default, no mouse events are reported. The function will return a mask to indicate which of the specified mouse events -can be reported; on complete failure it returns 0. If oldmask is non-NULL, +can be reported; on complete failure it returns 0. +If oldmask is non-NULL, this function fills the indicated location with the previous value of the given window's mouse event mask. As a side effect, setting a zero mousemask may turn off the mouse pointer; -setting a nonzero mask may turn it on. Whether this happens is -device-dependent. +setting a nonzero mask may turn it on. +Whether this happens is device-dependent. Here are the mouse event type masks: @@ -119,20 +123,24 @@ Once a class of mouse events have been made visible in a window, calling the \fBwgetch\fR function on that window may return \fBKEY_MOUSE\fR as an indicator that a mouse event has been queued. To read the event data and pop the event off the queue, call -\fBgetmouse\fR. This function will return \fBOK\fR if a mouse event +\fBgetmouse\fR. +This function will return \fBOK\fR if a mouse event is actually visible in the given window, \fBERR\fR otherwise. When \fBgetmouse\fR returns \fBOK\fR, the data deposited as y and x in the event structure coordinates will be screen-relative character-cell -coordinates. The returned state mask will have exactly one bit set to +coordinates. +The returned state mask will have exactly one bit set to indicate the event type. -The \fBungetmouse\fR function behaves analogously to \fBungetch\fR. It pushes +The \fBungetmouse\fR function behaves analogously to \fBungetch\fR. +It pushes a \fBKEY_MOUSE\fR event onto the input queue, and associates with that event the given state data and screen-relative character-cell coordinates. The \fBwenclose\fR function tests whether a given pair of screen-relative character-cell coordinates is enclosed by a given window, returning TRUE -if it is and FALSE otherwise. It is useful for determining what subset of +if it is and FALSE otherwise. +It is useful for determining what subset of the screen windows enclose the location of a mouse event. The \fBwmouse_trafo\fR function transforms a given pair of coordinates from @@ -140,24 +148,33 @@ stdscr-relative coordinates to screen-relative coordinates or vice versa. Please remember, that stdscr-relative coordinates are not always identical to screen-relative coordinates due to the mechanism to reserve lines on top or bottom of the screen for other purposes (ripoff() call, see also slk_... -functions). If the parameter \fBto_screen\fR is \fBTRUE\fR, the pointers +functions). +If the parameter \fBto_screen\fR is \fBTRUE\fR, the pointers \fBpY, pX\fR must reference the coordinates of a location inside the window -\fBwin\fR. They are converted to screen-relative coordinates and returned -through the pointers. If the conversion was successful, the function -returns \fBTRUE\fR. If one of the parameters was NULL or the location is -not inside the window, \fBFALSE\fR is returned. If \fBto_screen\fR is +\fBwin\fR. +They are converted to screen-relative coordinates and returned +through the pointers. +If the conversion was successful, the function returns \fBTRUE\fR. +If one of the parameters was NULL or the location is +not inside the window, \fBFALSE\fR is returned. +If \fBto_screen\fR is \fBFALSE\fR, the pointers \fBpY, pX\fR must reference screen-relative -coordinates. They are converted to stdscr-relative coordinates if the -window \fBwin\fR encloses this point. In this case the function returns -\fBTRUE\fR. If one of the parameters is NULL or the point is not inside the -window, \fBFALSE\fR is returned. Please notice, that the referenced coordinates +coordinates. +They are converted to stdscr-relative coordinates if the +window \fBwin\fR encloses this point. +In this case the function returns \fBTRUE\fR. +If one of the parameters is NULL or the point is not inside the +window, \fBFALSE\fR is returned. +Please notice, that the referenced coordinates are only replaced by the converted coordinates if the transformation was successful. The \fBmouseinterval\fR function sets the maximum time (in thousands of a -second) that can elapse between press and release events in order for them to -be recognized as a click. This function returns the previous interval value. -The default is one fifth of a second. +second) that can elapse between press and release events for them to +be recognized as a click. +Use \fBmouseinterval(-1)\fR to disable click resolution. +This function returns the previous interval value. +The default is one sixth of a second. Note that mouse events will be ignored when input is in cooked mode, and will cause an error beep when cooked mode is being simulated in a window by a @@ -167,8 +184,10 @@ termination. .SH RETURN VALUE \fBgetmouse\fR, \fBungetmouse\fR and \fBmouseinterval\fR return the integer \fBERR\fR upon failure or \fBOK\fR -upon successful completion. \fBmousemask\fR returns the -mask of reportable events. \fBwenclose\fR and \fBwmouse_trafo\fR +upon successful completion. +\fBmousemask\fR returns the +mask of reportable events. +\fBwenclose\fR and \fBwmouse_trafo\fR are boolean functions returning \fBTRUE\fR or \fBFALSE\fR depending on their test result. .SH PORTABILITY @@ -190,12 +209,14 @@ running on your machine, mouse events will not be visible to \fBncurses\fR(3X) (and the \fBwmousemask\fR function will always return \fB0\fR). -The z member in the event structure is not presently used. It is intended +The z member in the event structure is not presently used. +It is intended for use with touch screens (which may be pressure-sensitive) or with 3D-mice/trackballs/power gloves. .SH BUGS Mouse events under xterm will not in fact be ignored during cooked mode, -if they have been enabled by \fBwmousemask\fR. Instead, the xterm mouse +if they have been enabled by \fBwmousemask\fR. +Instead, the xterm mouse report sequence will appear in the string read. Mouse events under xterm will not be detected correctly in a window with @@ -205,7 +226,8 @@ of the response from xterm for mouse clicks). Because there are no standard terminal responses that would serve to identify terminals which support the xterm mouse protocol, \fBncurses\fR assumes that -if your $DISPLAY environment variable is set, and \fBkmous\fR is defined in +if your $TERM environment variable contains "xterm", +or \fBkmous\fR is defined in the terminal description, then the terminal may send mouse events. .SH SEE ALSO \fBcurses\fR(3X). |