pygame.mouse
- pygame module to work with the mouse
- pygame.mouse.get_pressed - get the state of the mouse buttons get the state of the mouse buttons pygame.mouse.get_pos - get the mouse cursor position get the mouse cursor position pygame.mouse.get_rel - get the amount of mouse movement get the amount of mouse movement pygame.mouse.set_pos - set the mouse cursor position set the mouse cursor position pygame.mouse.set_visible - hide or show the mouse cursor hide or show the mouse cursor pygame.mouse.get_focused - check if the display is receiving mouse input check if the display is receiving mouse input pygame.mouse.set_cursor - set the image for the system mouse cursor set the image for the system mouse cursor pygame.mouse.get_cursor - get the image for the system mouse cursor get the image for the system mouse cursor
pygame.mouse.get_pressed
- get the state of the mouse buttons pygame.moouse.get_pressed(): return (button1, button2, button3) Returns a sequence of booleans representing the state of all the mouse buttons. A true value means the mouse is currently being pressed at the time of the call. Note, to get all of the mouse events it is better to use either
- pygame.event.wait() or pygame.event.get() and check all of those events
pygame.mouse.get_pos
- get the mouse cursor position pygame.mouse.get_pos(): return (x, y) Returns the X and Y position of the mouse cursor. The position is relative the the top-left corner of the display. The cursor position can be located outside of the display window, but is always constrained to the screen.
pygame.mouse.get_rel
- get the amount of mouse movement pygame.mouse.get_rel(): return (x, y) Returns the amount of movement in X and Y since the previous call to this function. The relative movement of the mouse cursor is constrained to the edges of the screen, but see the virtual input mouse mode for a way around this. Virtual input mode is described at the top of the page.
pygame.mouse.set_pos
- set the mouse cursor position pygame.mouse.set_pos([x, y]): return None Set the current mouse position to arguments given. If the mouse cursor is visible it will jump to the new coordinates. Moving the mouse will generate a new pygaqme.MOUSEMOTION event.
pygame.mouse.set_visible
- hide or show the mouse cursor pygame.mouse.set_visible(bool): return bool If the bool argument is true, the mouse cursor will be visible. This will return the previous visible state of the cursor.
pygame.mouse.get_focused
- check if the display is receiving mouse input pygame.mouse.get_focused(): return bool Returns true when pygame is receiving mouse input events (or, in windowing terminology, is "active" or has the "focus"). This method is most useful when working in a window. By contrast, in full-screen mode, this method always returns true. Note: under MS Windows, the window that has the mouse focus also has the keyboard focus. But under X-Windows, one window can receive mouse events and another receive keyboard events. pygame.mouse.get_focused - check if the display is receiving mouse input indicates whether the pygame window receives mouse events.
pygame.mouse.set_cursor
- set the image for the system mouse cursor pygame.mouse.set_cursor(size, hotspot, xormasks, andmasks): return None When the mouse cursor is visible, it will be displayed as a black and white bitmap using the given bitmask arrays. The size is a sequence containing the cursor width and height. Hotspot is a sequence containing the cursor hotspot position. xormasks is a sequence of bytes containing the cursor xor data masks. Lastly is andmasks, a sequence of bytes containting the cursor bitmask data. Width must be a multiple of 8, and the mask arrays must be the correct size for the given width and height. Otherwise an exception is raised. See the pygame.cursor module for help creating default and custom masks for the system cursor.
pygame.mouse.get_cursor
- get the image for the system mouse cursor pygame.mouse.get_cursor(): return (size, hotspot, xormasks, andmasks) Get the information about the mouse system cursor. The return value is the same data as the arguments passed into pygame.mouse.set_cursor - set the image for the system mouse cursor.
pygame.cursors
- pygame module for cursor resources
- pygame.cursors.compile - create binary cursor data from simple strings create binary cursor data from simple strings pygame.cursors.load_xbm - load cursor data from an xbm file load cursor data from an xbm file
>>> pygame.mouse.set_cursor(*pygame.cursors.arrow)
>>> cursor = pygame.cursors.compile(pygame.cursors.textmarker_strings) >>> pygame.mouse.set_cursor(*cursor)
- o pygame.cursors.arrow o pygame.cursors.diamond o pygame.cursors.broken_x o pygame.cursors.tri_left o pygame.cursors.tri_right
- o pygame.cursors.thickarrow_strings o pygame.cursors.sizer_x_strings o pygame.cursors.sizer_y_strings o pygame.cursors.sizer_xy_strings
pygame.cursors.compile
- create binary cursor data from simple strings pygame.cursor.compile(strings, black='X', white='.', xor='o'): return data, mask A sequence of strings can be used to create binary cursor data for the system cursor. The return values are the same format needed by pygame.mouse.set_cursor - set the image for the system mouse cursor. If you are creating your own cursor strings, you can use any value represent the black and white pixels. Some system allow you to set a special toggle color for the system color, this is also called the xor color. If the system does not support xor cursors, that color will simply be black. The width of the strings must all be equal and be divisible by 8. An example set of cursor strings looks like this
- thickarrow_strings = ( #sized 24x24
- "XX ", "XXX ", "XXXX ", "XX.XX ", "XX..XX ", "XX...XX ", "XX....XX ", "XX.....XX ", "XX......XX ", "XX.......XX ", "XX........XX ", "XX........XXX ", "XX......XXXXX ", "XX.XXX..XX ", "XXXX XX..XX ", "XX XX..XX ", " XX..XX ", " XX..XX ", " XX..XX ", " XXXX ", " XX ", " ", " ", " ")
\ZnbNzgytswsc %%%%%%%%%%%%%% _
- thickarrow_strings = ( #sized 24x24
pygame.cursors.load_xbm
- load cursor data from an xbm file pygame.cursors.load_xbm(cursorfile, maskfile=None): return cursor_args This loads cursors for a simple subset of XBM files. XBM files are traditionally used to store cursors on unix systems, they are an ascii format used to represent simple images. Sometimes the black and white color values will be split into two separate XBM files. You can pass a second maskfile argument to load the two images into a single cursor. The cursorfile and maskfile arguments can either be filenames or filelike object with the readlines method. The return value cursor_args can be passed directly to the pygame.mouse.set_cursor - set the image for the system mouse cursor function.