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246.TH Tk_AllocCursorFromObj 3 8.1 Tk "Tk Library Procedures"
247.BS
248.SH NAME
249Tk_AllocCursorFromObj, Tk_GetCursor, Tk_GetCursorFromObj, Tk_GetCursorFromData, Tk_NameOfCursor, Tk_FreeCursorFromObj, Tk_FreeCursor \- maintain database of cursors
250.SH SYNOPSIS
251.nf
252\fB#include <tk.h>\fR
253.sp
254.VS 8.1
255Tk_Cursor
256\fBTk_AllocCursorFromObj(\fIinterp, tkwin, objPtr\fB)\fR
257.sp
258Tk_Cursor
259\fBTk_GetCursor(\fIinterp, tkwin, name\fB)\fR
260.sp
261Tk_Cursor
262\fBTk_GetCursorFromObj(\fItkwin, objPtr\fB)\fR
263.VE
264.sp
265Tk_Cursor
266\fBTk_GetCursorFromData(\fIinterp, tkwin, source, mask, width, height, xHot, yHot, fg, bg\fB)\fR
267.sp
268CONST char *
269\fBTk_NameOfCursor(\fIdisplay, cursor\fB)\fR
270.sp
271.VS 8.1
272\fBTk_FreeCursorFromObj(\fItkwin, objPtr\fB)\fR
273.VE
274.sp
275\fBTk_FreeCursor(\fIdisplay, cursor\fB)\fR
276.SH ARGUMENTS
277.AS "unsigned long" *pixelPtr
278.AP Tcl_Interp *interp in
279Interpreter to use for error reporting.
280.AP Tk_Window tkwin in
281Token for window in which the cursor will be used.
282.VS 8.1 br
283.AP Tcl_Obj *objPtr in/out
284Description of cursor; see below for possible values. Internal rep will be
285modified to cache pointer to corresponding Tk_Cursor.
286.AP char *name in
287Same as \fIobjPtr\fR except description of cursor is passed as a string and
288resulting Tk_Cursor isn't cached.
289.VE
290.AP "CONST char" *source in
291Data for cursor cursor, in standard cursor format.
292.AP "CONST char" *mask in
293Data for mask cursor, in standard cursor format.
294.AP "int" width in
295Width of \fIsource\fR and \fImask\fR.
296.AP "int" height in
297Height of \fIsource\fR and \fImask\fR.
298.AP "int" xHot in
299X-location of cursor hot-spot.
300.AP "int" yHot in
301Y-location of cursor hot-spot.
302.AP Tk_Uid fg in
303Textual description of foreground color for cursor.
304.AP Tk_Uid bg in
305Textual description of background color for cursor.
306.AP Display *display in
307Display for which \fIcursor\fR was allocated.
308.AP Tk_Cursor cursor in
309Opaque Tk identifier for cursor. If passed to \fBTk_FreeCursor\fR, must
310have been returned by some previous call to \fBTk_GetCursor\fR or
311\fBTk_GetCursorFromData\fR.
312.BE
313
314.SH DESCRIPTION
315.PP
316These procedures manage a collection of cursors
317being used by an application. The procedures allow cursors to be
318re-used efficiently, thereby avoiding server overhead, and also
319allow cursors to be named with character strings.
320.PP
321.VS 8.1
322\fBTk_AllocCursorFromObj\fR takes as argument an object describing a
323cursor, and returns an opaque Tk identifier for a cursor corresponding
324to the description. It re-uses an existing cursor if possible and
325creates a new one otherwise. \fBTk_AllocCursorFromObj\fR caches
326information about the return value in \fIobjPtr\fR, which speeds up
327future calls to procedures such as \fBTk_AllocCursorFromObj\fR and
328\fBTk_GetCursorFromObj\fR. If an error occurs in creating the cursor,
329such as when \fIobjPtr\fR refers to a non-existent file, then \fBNone\fR
330is returned and an error message will be stored in \fIinterp\fR's result
331if \fIinterp\fR isn't NULL. \fIObjPtr\fR must contain a standard Tcl
332list with one of the following forms:
333.VE
334.TP
335\fIname\fR\0[\fIfgColor\fR\0[\fIbgColor\fR]]
336\fIName\fR is the name of a cursor in the standard X cursor cursor,
337i.e., any of the names defined in \fBcursorcursor.h\fR, without
338the \fBXC_\fR. Some example values are \fBX_cursor\fR, \fBhand2\fR,
339or \fBleft_ptr\fR. Appendix B of ``The X Window System''
340by Scheifler & Gettys has illustrations showing what each of these
341cursors looks like. If \fIfgColor\fR and \fIbgColor\fR are both
342specified, they give the foreground and background colors to use
343for the cursor (any of the forms acceptable to \fBTk_GetColor\fR
344may be used). If only \fIfgColor\fR is specified, then there
345will be no background color: the background will be transparent.
346If no colors are specified, then the cursor
347will use black for its foreground color and white for its background
348color.
349.RS
350.PP
351The Macintosh version of Tk supports all of the X cursors and
352will also accept any of the standard Mac cursors
353including \fBibeam\fR, \fBcrosshair\fR, \fBwatch\fR, \fBplus\fR, and
354\fBarrow\fR. In addition, Tk will load Macintosh cursor resources of
355the types \fBcrsr\fR (color) and \fBCURS\fR (black and white) by the
356name of the of the resource. The application and all its open
357dynamic library's resource files will be searched for the named
358cursor. If there are conflicts color cursors will always be loaded
359in preference to black and white cursors.
360.RE
361.TP
362\fB@\fIsourceName\0maskName\0fgColor\0bgColor\fR
363In this form, \fIsourceName\fR and \fImaskName\fR are the names of
364files describing cursors for the cursor's source bits and mask.
365Each file must be in standard X11 or X10 cursor format.
366\fIFgColor\fR and \fIbgColor\fR
367indicate the colors to use for the
368cursor, in any of the forms acceptable to \fBTk_GetColor\fR. This
369form of the command will not work on Macintosh or Windows computers.
370.TP
371\fB@\fIsourceName\0fgColor\fR
372This form is similar to the one above, except that the source is
373used as mask also. This means that the cursor's background is
374transparent. This form of the command will not work on Macintosh
375or Windows computers.
376.TP
377\fB@\fIsourceName\fR
378This form only works on Windows, and will load a Windows system
379cursor (\fB.ani\fR or \fB.cur\fR) from the file specified in
380\fIsourceName\fR.
381.PP
382.VS 8.1
383\fBTk_GetCursor\fR is identical to \fBTk_AllocCursorFromObj\fR except
384that the description of the cursor is specified with a string instead
385of an object. This prevents \fBTk_GetCursor\fR from caching the
386return value, so \fBTk_GetCursor\fR is less efficient than
387\fBTk_AllocCursorFromObj\fR.
388.PP
389\fBTk_GetCursorFromObj\fR returns the token for an existing cursor, given
390the window and description used to create the cursor.
391\fBTk_GetCursorFromObj\fR doesn't actually create the cursor; the cursor
392must already have been created with a previous call to
393\fBTk_AllocCursorFromObj\fR or \fBTk_GetCursor\fR. The return
394value is cached in \fIobjPtr\fR, which speeds up
395future calls to \fBTk_GetCursorFromObj\fR with the same \fIobjPtr\fR
396and \fItkwin\fR.
397.VE
398.PP
399\fBTk_GetCursorFromData\fR allows cursors to be created from
400in-memory descriptions of their source and mask cursors. \fISource\fR
401points to standard cursor data for the cursor's source bits, and
402\fImask\fR points to standard cursor data describing
403which pixels of \fIsource\fR are to be drawn and which are to be
404considered transparent. \fIWidth\fR and \fIheight\fR give the
405dimensions of the cursor, \fIxHot\fR and \fIyHot\fR indicate the
406location of the cursor's hot-spot (the point that is reported when
407an event occurs), and \fIfg\fR and \fIbg\fR describe the cursor's
408foreground and background colors textually (any of the forms
409suitable for \fBTk_GetColor\fR may be used). Typically, the
410arguments to \fBTk_GetCursorFromData\fR are created by including
411a cursor file directly into the source code for a program, as in
412the following example:
413.CS
414Tk_Cursor cursor;
415#include "source.cursor"
416#include "mask.cursor"
417cursor = Tk_GetCursorFromData(interp, tkwin, source_bits,
418 mask_bits, source_width, source_height, source_x_hot,
419 source_y_hot, Tk_GetUid("red"), Tk_GetUid("blue"));
420.CE
421.PP
422Under normal conditions \fBTk_GetCursorFromData\fR
423will return an identifier for the requested cursor. If an error
424occurs in creating the cursor then \fBNone\fR is returned and an error
425message will be stored in \fIinterp\fR's result.
426.PP
427\fBTk_AllocCursorFromObj\fR, \fBTk_GetCursor\fR, and
428\fBTk_GetCursorFromData\fR maintain a
429database of all the cursors they have created. Whenever possible,
430a call to \fBTk_AllocCursorFromObj\fR, \fBTk_GetCursor\fR, or
431\fBTk_GetCursorFromData\fR will
432return an existing cursor rather than creating a new one. This
433approach can substantially reduce server overhead, so the Tk
434procedures should generally be used in preference to Xlib procedures
435like \fBXCreateFontCursor\fR or \fBXCreatePixmapCursor\fR, which
436create a new cursor on each call. The Tk procedures are also more
437portable than the lower-level X procedures.
438.PP
439The procedure \fBTk_NameOfCursor\fR is roughly the inverse of
440\fBTk_GetCursor\fR. If its \fIcursor\fR argument was created
441by \fBTk_GetCursor\fR, then the return value is the \fIname\fR
442argument that was passed to \fBTk_GetCursor\fR to create the
443cursor. If \fIcursor\fR was created by a call to \fBTk_GetCursorFromData\fR,
444or by any other mechanism, then the return value is a hexadecimal string
445giving the X identifier for the cursor.
446Note: the string returned by \fBTk_NameOfCursor\fR is
447only guaranteed to persist until the next call to
448\fBTk_NameOfCursor\fR. Also, this call is not portable except for
449cursors returned by \fBTk_GetCursor\fR.
450.PP
451.VS 8.1
452When a cursor returned by \fBTk_AllocCursorFromObj\fR, \fBTk_GetCursor\fR,
453or \fBTk_GetCursorFromData\fR
454is no longer needed, \fBTk_FreeCursorFromObj\fR or
455\fBTk_FreeCursor\fR should be called to release it.
456For \fBTk_FreeCursorFromObj\fR the cursor to release is specified
457with the same information used to create it; for
458\fBTk_FreeCursor\fR the cursor to release is specified
459with its Tk_Cursor token.
460There should be exactly one call to \fBTk_FreeCursor\fR for
461each call to \fBTk_AllocCursorFromObj\fR, \fBTk_GetCursor\fR,
462or \fBTk_GetCursorFromData\fR.
463.VE
464
465.SH BUGS
466In determining whether an existing cursor can be used to satisfy
467a new request, \fBTk_AllocCursorFromObj\fR, \fBTk_GetCursor\fR,
468and \fBTk_GetCursorFromData\fR
469consider only the immediate values of their arguments. For
470example, when a file name is passed to \fBTk_GetCursor\fR,
471\fBTk_GetCursor\fR will assume it is safe to re-use an existing
472cursor created from the same file name: it will not check to
473see whether the file itself has changed, or whether the current
474directory has changed, thereby causing the name to refer to
475a different file. Similarly, \fBTk_GetCursorFromData\fR assumes
476that if the same \fIsource\fR pointer is used in two different calls,
477then the pointers refer to the same data; it does not check to
478see if the actual data values have changed.
479
480.SH KEYWORDS
481cursor