Viadeo Twitter Google Bookmarks ! Facebook Digg del.icio.us MySpace Yahoo MyWeb Blinklist Netvouz Reddit Simpy StumbleUpon Bookmarks Windows Live Favorites 
Logo Documentation Qt ·  Page d'accueil  ·  Toutes les classes  ·  Classes principales  ·  Annotées  ·  Classes groupées  ·  Modules  ·  Fonctions  · 

QMouseEvent Class Reference
[QtGui module]

The QMouseEvent class contains parameters that describe a mouse event. More...

 #include <QMouseEvent>

Inherits QInputEvent.

Public Functions

  • QMouseEvent ( Type type, const QPoint & position, Qt::MouseButton button, Qt::MouseButtons buttons, Qt::KeyboardModifiers modifiers )
  • QMouseEvent ( Type type, const QPoint & pos, const QPoint & globalPos, Qt::MouseButton button, Qt::MouseButtons buttons, Qt::KeyboardModifiers modifiers )
  • Qt::MouseButton button () const
  • Qt::MouseButtons buttons () const
  • const QPoint & globalPos () const
  • int globalX () const
  • int globalY () const
  • const QPoint & pos () const
  • int x () const
  • int y () const
  • 1 public function inherited from QInputEvent
  • 6 public functions inherited from QEvent

Additional Inherited Members

  • 1 property inherited from QEvent

Detailed Description

The QMouseEvent class contains parameters that describe a mouse event.

Mouse events occur when a mouse button is pressed or released inside a widget, or when the mouse cursor is moved.

Mouse move events will occur only when a mouse button is pressed down, unless mouse tracking has been enabled with QWidget::setMouseTracking().

Qt automatically grabs the mouse when a mouse button is pressed inside a widget; the widget will continue to receive mouse events until the last mouse button is released.

A mouse event contains a special accept flag that indicates whether the receiver wants the event. You should call ignore() if the mouse event is not handled by your widget. A mouse event is propagated up the parent widget chain until a widget accepts it with accept(), or an event filter consumes it.

The state of the keyboard modifier keys can be found by calling the modifiers() function, inhertied from QInputEvent.

The functions pos(), x(), and y() give the cursor position relative to the widget that receives the mouse event. If you move the widget as a result of the mouse event, use the global position returned by globalPos() to avoid a shaking motion.

The QWidget::setEnabled() function can be used to enable or disable mouse and keyboard events for a widget.

Reimplement the QWidget event handlers, QWidget::mousePressEvent(), QWidget::mouseReleaseEvent(), QWidget::mouseDoubleClickEvent(), and QWidget::mouseMoveEvent() to receive mouse events in your own widgets.

QCursor::pos()

See also QWidget::setMouseTracking() and QWidget::grabMouse().


Member Function Documentation

QMouseEvent::QMouseEvent ( Type type, const QPoint & position, Qt::MouseButton button, Qt::MouseButtons buttons, Qt::KeyboardModifiers modifiers )

Constructs a mouse event object.

The type parameter must be one of QEvent::MouseButtonPress, QEvent::MouseButtonRelease, QEvent::MouseButtonDblClick, or QEvent::MouseMove.

The position is the mouse cursor's position relative to the receiving widget. The button that caused the event is given as a value from the Qt::MouseButton enum. If the event type is MouseMove, the appropriate button for this event is Qt::NoButton. The mouse and keyboard states at the time of the event are specified by buttons and modifiers.

The globalPos() is initialized to QCursor::pos(), which may not be appropriate. Use the other constructor to specify the global position explicitly.

QMouseEvent::QMouseEvent ( Type type, const QPoint & pos, const QPoint & globalPos, Qt::MouseButton button, Qt::MouseButtons buttons, Qt::KeyboardModifiers modifiers )

Constructs a mouse event object.

The type parameter must be QEvent::MouseButtonPress, QEvent::MouseButtonRelease, QEvent::MouseButtonDblClick, or QEvent::MouseMove.

The pos is the mouse cursor's position relative to the receiving widget. The cursor's position in global coordinates is specified by globalPos. The button that caused the event is given as a value from the Qt::MouseButton enum. If the event type is MouseMove, the appropriate button for this event is Qt::NoButton. buttons is the state of all buttons at the time of the event, modifiers the state of all keyboard modifiers.

Qt::MouseButton QMouseEvent::button () const

Returns the button that caused the event.

Note that the returned value is always Qt::NoButton for mouse move events.

See also buttons() and Qt::MouseButton.

Qt::MouseButtons QMouseEvent::buttons () const

Returns the button state when the event was generated. The button state is a combination of Qt::LeftButton, Qt::RightButton, Qt::MidButton using the OR operator. For mouse move events, this is all buttons that are pressed down. For mouse press and double click events this includes the button that caused the event. For mouse release events this excludes the button that caused the event.

See also button() and Qt::MouseButton.

const QPoint & QMouseEvent::globalPos () const

Returns the global position of the mouse cursor at the time of the event. This is important on asynchronous window systems like X11. Whenever you move your widgets around in response to mouse events, globalPos() may differ a lot from the current pointer position QCursor::pos(), and from QWidget::mapToGlobal(pos()).

See also globalX() and globalY().

int QMouseEvent::globalX () const

Returns the global x position of the mouse cursor at the time of the event.

See also globalY() and globalPos().

int QMouseEvent::globalY () const

Returns the global y position of the mouse cursor at the time of the event.

See also globalX() and globalPos().

const QPoint & QMouseEvent::pos () const

Returns the position of the mouse cursor, relative to the widget that received the event.

If you move the widget as a result of the mouse event, use the global position returned by globalPos() to avoid a shaking motion.

See also x(), y(), and globalPos().

int QMouseEvent::x () const

Returns the x position of the mouse cursor, relative to the widget that received the event.

See also y() and pos().

int QMouseEvent::y () const

Returns the y position of the mouse cursor, relative to the widget that received the event.

See also x() and pos().


Member Function Documentation

QMouseEvent::QMouseEvent ( Type type, const QPoint & pos, Qt::ButtonState button, int state )

Use QMouseEvent(type, pos, button, buttons, modifiers) instead, where buttons is state & Qt::MouseButtonMask and modifiers is state & Qt::KeyButtonMask.

QMouseEvent::QMouseEvent ( Type type, const QPoint & pos, const QPoint & globalPos, Qt::ButtonState button, int state )

Use QMouseEvent(type, pos, globalPos, button, buttons, modifiers) instead, where buttons is state & Qt::MouseButtonMask and modifiers is state & Qt::KeyButtonMask.

Qt::ButtonState QMouseEvent::state () const

Returns the button state immediately before the event was generated. The button state is a combination of mouse buttons (see Qt::ButtonState) and keyboard modifiers (Qt::MouseButtons).

Use buttons() and/or modifiers() instead. Be aware that buttons() return the state immediately after the event was generated.

Qt::ButtonState QMouseEvent::stateAfter () const

Returns the button state immediately after the event was generated. The button state is a combination of mouse buttons (see Qt::ButtonState) and keyboard modifiers (Qt::MouseButtons).

Use buttons() and/or modifiers() instead.

Publicité

Best Of

Actualités les plus lues

Semaine
Mois
Année
  1. « Quelque chose ne va vraiment pas avec les développeurs "modernes" », un développeur à "l'ancienne" critique la multiplication des bibliothèques 44
  2. Microsoft ouvre aux autres compilateurs C++ AMP, la spécification pour la conception d'applications parallèles C++ utilisant le GPU 22
  3. Les développeurs ignorent-ils trop les failles découvertes dans leur code ? Prenez-vous en compte les remarques des autres ? 17
  4. RIM : « 13 % des développeurs ont gagné plus de 100 000 $ sur l'AppWord », Qt et open-source au menu du BlackBerry DevCon Europe 0
  5. BlackBerry 10 : premières images du prochain OS de RIM qui devrait intégrer des widgets et des tuiles inspirées de Windows Phone 0
  6. Quelles nouveautés de C++11 Visual C++ doit-il rapidement intégrer ? Donnez-nous votre avis 10
  7. Adieu qmake, bienvenue qbs : Qt Building Suite, un outil déclaratif et extensible pour la compilation de projets Qt 17
Page suivante

Le blog Digia au hasard

Logo

Déploiement d'applications Qt Commercial sur les tablettes Windows 8

Le blog Digia est l'endroit privilégié pour la communication sur l'édition commerciale de Qt, où des réponses publiques sont apportées aux questions les plus posées au support. Lire l'article.

Communauté

Ressources

Liens utiles

Contact

  • Vous souhaitez rejoindre la rédaction ou proposer un tutoriel, une traduction, une question... ? Postez dans le forum Contribuez ou contactez-nous par MP ou par email (voir en bas de page).

Qt dans le magazine

Cette page est une traduction d'une page de la documentation de Qt, écrite par Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). Les éventuels problèmes résultant d'une mauvaise traduction ne sont pas imputables à Nokia. Qt 4.2
Copyright © 2012 Developpez LLC. Tous droits réservés Developpez LLC. Aucune reproduction, même partielle, ne peut être faite de ce site et de l'ensemble de son contenu : textes, documents et images sans l'autorisation expresse de Developpez LLC. Sinon, vous encourez selon la loi jusqu'à 3 ans de prison et jusqu'à 300 000 E de dommages et intérêts. Cette page est déposée à la SACD.
Vous avez déniché une erreur ? Un bug ? Une redirection cassée ? Ou tout autre problème, quel qu'il soit ? Ou bien vous désirez participer à ce projet de traduction ? N'hésitez pas à nous contacter ou par MP !
 
 
 
 
Partenaires

Hébergement Web