// Copyright 2015 The TCell Authors // // Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); // you may not use file except in compliance with the License. // You may obtain a copy of the license at // // http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 // // Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software // distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, // WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. // See the License for the specific language governing permissions and // limitations under the License. package tcell import ( "time" ) // EventMouse is a mouse event. It is sent on either mouse up or mouse down // events. It is also sent on mouse motion events - if the terminal supports // it. We make every effort to ensure that mouse release events are delivered. // Hence, click drag can be identified by a motion event with the mouse down, // without any intervening button release. On some terminals only the initiating // press and terminating release event will be delivered. // // Mouse wheel events, when reported, may appear on their own as individual // impulses; that is, there will normally not be a release event delivered // for mouse wheel movements. // // Most terminals cannot report the state of more than one button at a time -- // and some cannot report motion events unless a button is pressed. // // Applications can inspect the time between events to resolve double or // triple clicks. type EventMouse struct { t time.Time btn ButtonMask mod ModMask x int y int } // When returns the time when this EventMouse was created. func (ev *EventMouse) When() time.Time { return ev.t } // Buttons returns the list of buttons that were pressed or wheel motions. func (ev *EventMouse) Buttons() ButtonMask { return ev.btn } // Modifiers returns a list of keyboard modifiers that were pressed // with the mouse button(s). func (ev *EventMouse) Modifiers() ModMask { return ev.mod } // Position returns the mouse position in character cells. The origin // 0, 0 is at the upper left corner. func (ev *EventMouse) Position() (int, int) { return ev.x, ev.y } // NewEventMouse is used to create a new mouse event. Applications // shouldn't need to use this; its mostly for screen implementors. func NewEventMouse(x, y int, btn ButtonMask, mod ModMask) *EventMouse { return &EventMouse{t: time.Now(), x: x, y: y, btn: btn, mod: mod} } // ButtonMask is a mask of mouse buttons and wheel events. Mouse button presses // are normally delivered as both press and release events. Mouse wheel events // are normally just single impulse events. Windows supports up to eight // separate buttons plus all four wheel directions, but XTerm can only support // mouse buttons 1-3 and wheel up/down. Its not unheard of for terminals // to support only one or two buttons (think Macs). Old terminals, and true // emulations (such as vt100) won't support mice at all, of course. type ButtonMask int16 const ( Button1 ButtonMask = 1 << iota // Usually left mouse button. Button2 // Usually the middle mouse button. Button3 // Usually the right mouse button. Button4 // Often a side button (thumb/next). Button5 // Often a side button (thumb/prev). Button6 Button7 Button8 WheelUp // Wheel motion up/away from user. WheelDown // Wheel motion down/towards user. WheelLeft // Wheel motion to left. WheelRight // Wheel motion to right. ButtonNone ButtonMask = 0 // No button or wheel events. )