QCursor Class Reference
The QCursor class provides a mouse cursor with an arbitrary shape.
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#include <qcursor.h>
List of all member functions.
Public Members
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QCursor ( const QBitmap & bitmap, const QBitmap & mask, int hotX=-1, int hotY=-1 )Â
QCursor ( const QPixmap & pixmap, int hotX=-1, int hotY=-1 )Â
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QCursor&Â
operator= ( const QCursor & )Â
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const QBitmap*Â
bitmap () const
const QBitmap*Â
mask () const
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Static Public Members
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voidÂ
setPos ( int x, int y )Â
voidÂ
setPos ( const QPoint & )Â
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Related Functions
(Note that these are not member functions.)
- QDataStream & operator>> (QDataStream & s, QCursor & c)
- QDataStream & operator<< (QDataStream & s, const QCursor & c)
Detailed Description
The QCursor class provides a mouse cursor with an arbitrary shape.
This class is used for mainly two things; to create mouse cursors to be
associated with widgets and to get and set the position of the mouse
cursor.
Qt has a number of standard cursor shapes, but you can also make
custom cursor shapes based on a QBitmap, a mask and a hotspot.
To associate a cursor with a widget, use QWidget::setCursor(). To
associate a cursor with all widgets (normally for a short period of
time), use QApplication::setOverrideCursor().
To set a cursor shape use QCursor::setShape() or use the QCursor constructor
which takes the shape as argument, or use one of the predefined cursors:
-
arrowCursor
- standard arrow cursor
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upArrowCursor
- upwards arrow
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crossCursor
- crosshair
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waitCursor
- hourglass/watch
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ibeamCursor
- ibeam/text entry
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sizeVerCursor
- vertical resize
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sizeHorCursor
- horizontal resize
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sizeBDiagCursor
- diagonal resize (/)
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sizeFDiagCursor
- diagonal resize (\)
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sizeAllCursor
- all directions resize
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blankCursor
- blank/invisible cursor
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splitVCursor
- vertical splitting
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splitHCursor
- horziontal splitting
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pointingHandCursor
- a pointing hand
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forbiddenCursor
- a slashed circle
If you want to create a cursor with an own bitmap, use either the QCursor
constructor which takes a a bitmap and a mask or the constructor which
takes a pixmap as arguments.
To set or get the position of the mouse cursor use the static methods
QCursor::pos() and QCursor::setPos().
See also QWidget and GUI Design Handbook: Cursors.
Examples:
cursor/cursor.cpp
Member Function Documentation
QCursor::QCursor ()
Constructs a cursor with the default arrow shape.
QCursor::QCursor ( const QBitmap & bitmap, const QBitmap & mask, int hotX=-1, int hotY=-1 )
Constructs a custom bitmap cursor.
bitmap and
mask make up the bitmap.
hotX and
hotY define the hot spot of this cursor.
If hotX is negative, it is set to the bitmap().width()/2.
If hotY is negative, it is set to the bitmap().height()/2.
The cursor bitmap (B) and mask (M) bits are combined this way:
- B=1 and M=1 gives black.
- B=0 and M=1 gives white.
- B=0 and M=0 gives transparency.
- B=1 and M=0 gives an undefined result.
Use the global color color0
to draw 0-pixels and color1
to draw
1-pixels in the bitmaps.
Allowed cursor sizes depend on the display hardware (or the underlying
window system). We recommend using 32x32 cursors, because this size
is supported on all platforms. Some platforms also support 16x16, 48x48
and 64x64 cursors.
See also QBitmap::QBitmap() and QBitmap::setMask().
QCursor::QCursor ( const QPixmap & pixmap, int hotX=-1, int hotY=-1 )
Constructs a custom pixmap cursor.
pixmap is the image
(usually it should have a mask (set using QPixmap::setMask())
hotX and
hotY define the hot spot of this cursor.
If hotX is negative, it is set to the pixmap().width()/2.
If hotY is negative, it is set to the pixmap().height()/2.
Allowed cursor sizes depend on the display hardware (or the underlying
window system). We recommend using 32x32 cursors, because this size
is supported on all platforms. Some platforms also support 16x16, 48x48
and 64x64 cursors.
Currently, only black-and-white pixmaps can be used.
See also QPixmap::QPixmap() and QPixmap::setMask().
QCursor::QCursor ( const QCursor & c )
Constructs a copy of the cursor c.
QCursor::QCursor ( int shape )
Constructs a cursor with the specified shape.
shape can be one of
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ArrowCursor
- standard arrow cursor
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UpArrowCursor
- upwards arrow
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CrossCursor
- crosshair
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WaitCursor
- hourglass/watch
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IbeamCursor
- ibeam/text entry
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SizeVerCursor
- vertical resize
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SizeHorCursor
- horizontal resize
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SizeBDiagCursor
- diagonal resize (/)
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SizeFDiagCursor
- diagonal resize (\)
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SizeAllCursor
- all directions resize
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BlankCursor
- blank/invisible cursor
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SplitVCursor
- vertical splitting
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SplitHCursor
- horziontal splitting
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PointingHandCursor
- a pointing hand
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BitmapCursor
- userdefined bitmap cursor
These correspond to the predefined
global QCursor objects.
See also setShape().
QCursor::~QCursor ()
Destructs the cursor.
const QBitmap * QCursor::bitmap () const
Returns the cursor bitmap, or 0 if it is one of the standard cursors.
void QCursor::cleanup () [static]
Internal function that deinitializes the predefined cursors.
This function is called from the QApplication destructor.
See also initialize().
QPoint QCursor::hotSpot () const
Returns the cursor hot spot, or (0,0) if it is one of the standard cursors.
void QCursor::initialize () [static]
Internal function that initializes the predefined cursors.
This function is called from the QApplication constructor.
See also cleanup().
const QBitmap * QCursor::mask () const
Returns the cursor bitmap mask, or 0 if it is one of the standard cursors.
QCursor & QCursor::operator= ( const QCursor & c )
Assigns c to this cursor and returns a reference to this cursor.
QPoint QCursor::pos () [static]
Returns the position of the cursor (hot spot) in global screen
coordinates.
You can call QWidget::mapFromGlobal() to translate it to widget
coordinates.
See also setPos(), QWidget::mapFromGlobal() and QWidget::mapToGlobal().
void QCursor::setPos ( int x, int y ) [static]
Moves the cursor (hot spot) to the global screen position x and y.
You can call QWidget::mapToGlobal() to translate widget coordinates
to global screen coordinates.
See also pos(), QWidget::mapFromGlobal() and QWidget::mapToGlobal().
void QCursor::setPos ( const QPoint & ) [static]
This is an overloaded member function, provided for convenience. It differs from the above function only in what argument(s) it accepts.
void QCursor::setShape ( int shape )
Sets the cursor to the shape identified by shape.
-
ArrowCursor
- standard arrow cursor
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UpArrowCursor
- upwards arrow
- CrossCursor - crosshair
-
WaitCursor
- hourglass/watch
-
IbeamCursor
- ibeam/text entry
-
SizeVerCursor
- vertical resize
-
SizeHorCursor
- horizontal resize
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SizeBDiagCursor
- diagonal resize (/)
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SizeFDiagCursor
- diagonal resize (\)
-
SizeAllCursor
- all directions resize
-
BlankCursor
- blank/invisible cursor
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SplitVCursor
- vertical splitting
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SplitHCursor
- horziontal splitting
-
PointingHandCursor
- a pointing hand
-
ForbiddenCursor
- a slashed circle
-
BitmapCursor
- userdefined bitmap cursor
These correspond to the predefined
global QCursor objects.
See also shape().
int QCursor::shape () const
Returns the cursor shape identifer. The return value is one of
following values (cast to an int)
-
ArrowCursor
- standard arrow cursor
-
UpArrowCursor
- upwards arrow
-
CrossCursor
- crosshair
-
WaitCursor
- hourglass/watch
-
IbeamCursor
- ibeam/text entry
-
SizeVerCursor
- vertical resize
-
SizeHorCursor
- horizontal resize
-
SizeBDiagCursor
- diagonal resize (/)
-
SizeFDiagCursor
- diagonal resize (\)
-
SizeAllCursor
- all directions resize
-
BlankCursor
- blank/invisible cursor
-
SplitVCursor
- vertical splitting
-
SplitHCursor
- horziontal splitting
-
PointingHandCursor
- a pointing hand
-
ForbiddenCursor
- a slashed circle
-
BitmapCursor
- userdefined bitmap cursor
These correspond to the predefined
global QCursor objects.
See also setShape().
Related Functions
Reads a cursor from the stream s and sets c to the read data.
See also Format of the QDataStream operators
Writes the cursor c to the stream s.
See also Format of the QDataStream operators
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