Documentation of SFML 2.6.2

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Cursor defines the appearance of a system cursor. More...

#include <SFML/Window/Cursor.hpp>

Inheritance diagram for sf::Cursor:
sf::NonCopyable

Public Types

enum  Type {
  Arrow , ArrowWait , Wait , Text ,
  Hand , SizeHorizontal , SizeVertical , SizeTopLeftBottomRight ,
  SizeBottomLeftTopRight , SizeLeft , SizeRight , SizeTop ,
  SizeBottom , SizeTopLeft , SizeBottomRight , SizeBottomLeft ,
  SizeTopRight , SizeAll , Cross , Help ,
  NotAllowed
}
 Enumeration of the native system cursor types. More...
 

Public Member Functions

 Cursor ()
 Default constructor.
 
 ~Cursor ()
 Destructor.
 
bool loadFromPixels (const Uint8 *pixels, Vector2u size, Vector2u hotspot)
 Create a cursor with the provided image.
 
bool loadFromSystem (Type type)
 Create a native system cursor.
 

Friends

class WindowBase
 

Detailed Description

Cursor defines the appearance of a system cursor.

Warning
Features related to Cursor are not supported on iOS and Android.

This class abstracts the operating system resources associated with either a native system cursor or a custom cursor.

After loading the cursor the graphical appearance with either loadFromPixels() or loadFromSystem(), the cursor can be changed with sf::Window::setMouseCursor().

The behaviour is undefined if the cursor is destroyed while in use by the window.

Usage example:

sf::Window window;
// ... create window as usual ...
sf::Cursor cursor;
window.setMouseCursor(cursor);
Cursor defines the appearance of a system cursor.
Definition Cursor.hpp:47
@ Hand
Pointing hand cursor.
Definition Cursor.hpp:92
bool loadFromSystem(Type type)
Create a native system cursor.
void setMouseCursor(const Cursor &cursor)
Set the displayed cursor to a native system cursor.
Window that serves as a target for OpenGL rendering.
See also
sf::Window::setMouseCursor

Definition at line 46 of file Cursor.hpp.

Member Enumeration Documentation

◆ Type

Enumeration of the native system cursor types.

Refer to the following table to determine which cursor is available on which platform.

Type Linux Mac OS X Windows
sf::Cursor::Arrow yes yes yes
sf::Cursor::ArrowWait no no yes
sf::Cursor::Wait yes no yes
sf::Cursor::Text yes yes yes
sf::Cursor::Hand yes yes yes
sf::Cursor::SizeHorizontal yes yes yes
sf::Cursor::SizeVertical yes yes yes
sf::Cursor::SizeTopLeftBottomRight no yes* yes
sf::Cursor::SizeBottomLeftTopRight no yes* yes
sf::Cursor::SizeLeft yes yes** yes**
sf::Cursor::SizeRight yes yes** yes**
sf::Cursor::SizeTop yes yes** yes**
sf::Cursor::SizeBottom yes yes** yes**
sf::Cursor::SizeTopLeft yes yes** yes**
sf::Cursor::SizeTopRight yes yes** yes**
sf::Cursor::SizeBottomLeft yes yes** yes**
sf::Cursor::SizeBottomRight yes yes** yes**
sf::Cursor::SizeAll yes no yes
sf::Cursor::Cross yes yes yes
sf::Cursor::Help yes yes* yes
sf::Cursor::NotAllowed yes yes yes
  • These cursor types are undocumented so may not be available on all versions, but have been tested on 10.13

** On Windows and macOS, double-headed arrows are used

Enumerator
Arrow 

Arrow cursor (default)

ArrowWait 

Busy arrow cursor.

Wait 

Busy cursor.

Text 

I-beam, cursor when hovering over a field allowing text entry.

Hand 

Pointing hand cursor.

SizeHorizontal 

Horizontal double arrow cursor.

SizeVertical 

Vertical double arrow cursor.

SizeTopLeftBottomRight 

Double arrow cursor going from top-left to bottom-right.

SizeBottomLeftTopRight 

Double arrow cursor going from bottom-left to top-right.

SizeLeft 

Left arrow cursor on Linux, same as SizeHorizontal on other platforms.

SizeRight 

Right arrow cursor on Linux, same as SizeHorizontal on other platforms.

SizeTop 

Up arrow cursor on Linux, same as SizeVertical on other platforms.

SizeBottom 

Down arrow cursor on Linux, same as SizeVertical on other platforms.

SizeTopLeft 

Top-left arrow cursor on Linux, same as SizeTopLeftBottomRight on other platforms.

SizeBottomRight 

Bottom-right arrow cursor on Linux, same as SizeTopLeftBottomRight on other platforms.

SizeBottomLeft 

Bottom-left arrow cursor on Linux, same as SizeBottomLeftTopRight on other platforms.

SizeTopRight 

Top-right arrow cursor on Linux, same as SizeBottomLeftTopRight on other platforms.

SizeAll 

Combination of SizeHorizontal and SizeVertical.

Cross 

Crosshair cursor.

Help 

Help cursor.

NotAllowed 

Action not allowed cursor.

Definition at line 86 of file Cursor.hpp.

Constructor & Destructor Documentation

◆ Cursor()

sf::Cursor::Cursor ( )

Default constructor.

This constructor doesn't actually create the cursor; initially the new instance is invalid and must not be used until either loadFromPixels() or loadFromSystem() is called and successfully created a cursor.

◆ ~Cursor()

sf::Cursor::~Cursor ( )

Destructor.

This destructor releases the system resources associated with this cursor, if any.

Member Function Documentation

◆ loadFromPixels()

bool sf::Cursor::loadFromPixels ( const Uint8 * pixels,
Vector2u size,
Vector2u hotspot )

Create a cursor with the provided image.

pixels must be an array of width by height pixels in 32-bit RGBA format. If not, this will cause undefined behavior.

If pixels is null or either width or height are 0, the current cursor is left unchanged and the function will return false.

In addition to specifying the pixel data, you can also specify the location of the hotspot of the cursor. The hotspot is the pixel coordinate within the cursor image which will be located exactly where the mouse pointer position is. Any mouse actions that are performed will return the window/screen location of the hotspot.

Warning
On Unix platforms which do not support colored cursors, the pixels are mapped into a monochrome bitmap: pixels with an alpha channel to 0 are transparent, black if the RGB channel are close to zero, and white otherwise.
Parameters
pixelsArray of pixels of the image
sizeWidth and height of the image
hotspot(x,y) location of the hotspot
Returns
true if the cursor was successfully loaded; false otherwise

◆ loadFromSystem()

bool sf::Cursor::loadFromSystem ( Type type)

Create a native system cursor.

Refer to the list of cursor available on each system (see sf::Cursor::Type) to know whether a given cursor is expected to load successfully or is not supported by the operating system.

Parameters
typeNative system cursor type
Returns
true if and only if the corresponding cursor is natively supported by the operating system; false otherwise

Friends And Related Symbol Documentation

◆ WindowBase

friend class WindowBase
friend

Definition at line 183 of file Cursor.hpp.


The documentation for this class was generated from the following file: