/* This file is part of the KDE libraries SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 1998 Kurt Granroth SPDX-FileCopyrightText: 2000 Carsten Pfeiffer SPDX-License-Identifier: LGPL-2.0-only */ #ifndef KCURSOR_H #define KCURSOR_H #include class QEvent; class QObject; class QWidget; /** * @class KCursor kcursor.h KCursor * * The KCursor class provides a set of static * convenience methods for auto-hiding cursors on widgets. */ class KWIDGETSADDONS_EXPORT KCursor { public: /** * Sets auto-hiding the cursor for widget @p w. Enabling it will result in * the cursor being hidden when * @li a key-event happens * @li there are no key-events for a configured time-frame (see * setHideCursorDelay()) * * The cursor will be shown again when the focus is lost or a mouse-event * happens. * * Side effect: when enabling auto-hide, mouseTracking is enabled for the * specified widget, because it's needed to get mouse-move-events. So * don't disable mouseTracking for a widget while using auto-hide for it. * * When disabling auto-hide, mouseTracking will be disabled, so if you need * mouseTracking after disabling auto-hide, you have to re-enable * mouseTracking. * * If you want to use auto-hiding for widgets that don't take focus, e.g. * a QCanvasView, then you have to pass all key-events that should trigger * auto-hiding to autoHideEventFilter(). */ static void setAutoHideCursor(QWidget *w, bool enable, bool customEventFilter = false); /** * Sets the delay time in milliseconds for auto-hiding. When no keyboard * events arrive for that time-frame, the cursor will be hidden. * * Default is 5000, i.e. 5 seconds. */ static void setHideCursorDelay(int ms); /** * @returns the current auto-hide delay time. * * Default is 5000, i.e. 5 seconds. */ static int hideCursorDelay(); /** * KCursor has to install an eventFilter over the widget you want to * auto-hide. If you have an own eventFilter() on that widget and stop * some events by returning true, you might break auto-hiding, because * KCursor doesn't get those events. * * In this case, you need to call setAutoHideCursor( widget, true, true ); * to tell KCursor not to install an eventFilter. Then you call this method * from the beginning of your eventFilter, for example: * \code * edit = new KEdit( this, "some edit widget" ); * edit->installEventFilter( this ); * KCursor::setAutoHideCursor( edit, true, true ); * * [...] * * bool YourClass::eventFilter( QObject *o, QEvent *e ) * { * if ( o == edit ) // only that widget where you enabled auto-hide! * KCursor::autoHideEventFilter( o, e ); * * // now you can do your own event-processing * [...] * } * \endcode * * Note that you must not call KCursor::autoHideEventFilter() when you * didn't enable or after disabling auto-hiding. */ static void autoHideEventFilter(QObject *, QEvent *); private: KCursor() = delete; }; #endif // _KCURSOR_H