mouse_event
The mouse_event
function synthesizes mouse motion and button clicks.
VOID mouse_event(
DWORD dwFlags, |
// flags specifying
various motion/click variants |
DWORD dx, |
// horizontal mouse
position or position change |
DWORD dy, |
// vertical mouse
position or position change |
DWORD dwData, |
// amount of wheel
movement |
DWORD dwExtraInfo |
// 32 bits of
application-defined information |
); |
|
Parameters
dwFlags
A set of flag
bits that specify various aspects of mouse motion and button clicking. The bits
in this parameter can be any reasonable combination of the following values:
Value |
Meaning |
MOUSEEVENTF_ABSOLUTE |
Specifies
that the dx and dy parameters contain normalized absolute
coordinates. If not set, those parameters contain relative data: the change
in position since the last reported position. This flag can be set, or not
set, regardless of what kind of mouse or mouse-like device, if any, is
connected to the system. For further information about relative mouse motion,
see the following Remarks section. |
MOUSEEVENTF_MOVE |
Specifies
that movement occurred. |
MOUSEEVENTF_LEFTDOWN |
Specifies
that the left button changed to down. |
MOUSEEVENTF_LEFTUP |
Specifies
that the left button changed to up. |
MOUSEEVENTF_RIGHTDOWN |
Specifies
that the right button changed to down. |
MOUSEEVENTF_RIGHTUP |
Specifies
that the right button changed to up. |
MOUSEEVENTF_MIDDLEDOWN |
Specifies
that the middle button changed to down. |
MOUSEEVENTF_MIDDLEUP |
Specifies
that the middle button changed to up. |
MOUSEEVENTF_WHEEL |
Windows NT
only: Specifies that the wheel has been moved, if the mouse has a wheel. The
amount of movement is given in dwData |
The flag bits
that specify mouse button status are set to indicate changes in status, not
ongoing conditions. For example, if the left mouse button is pressed and held
down, MOUSEEVENTF_LEFTDOWN is set when the left button is first pressed, but
not for subsequent motions. Similarly, MOUSEEVENTF_LEFTUP is set only when the
button is first released.
dx
Specifies the
mouse s absolute position along the x-axis or its amount of motion since the
last mouse event was generated, depending on the setting of
MOUSEEVENTF_ABSOLUTE. Absolute data is given as the mouse s actual x-coordinate;
relative data is given as the number of mickeys moved.
dy
Specifies the
mouse s absolute position along the y-axis or its amount of motion since the
last mouse event was generated, depending on the setting of
MOUSEEVENTF_ABSOLUTE. Absolute data is given as the mouse s actual y-coordinate;
relative data is given as the number of mickeys moved.
dwData
If dwFlags
is MOUSEEVENTF_WHEEL, then dwData specifies the amount of wheel
movement. A positive value indicates that the wheel was rotated forward, away
from the user; a negative value indicates that the wheel was rotated backward,
toward the user. One wheel click is defined as WHEEL_DELTA, which is 120.
If dwFlags
is not MOUSEEVENTF_WHEEL, then dwData should be zero.
dwExtraInfo
Specifies an
additional 32-bit value associated with the mouse event. An application calls GetMessageExtraInfo
Return Values
This function
has no return value.
Remarks
If the mouse
has moved, indicated by MOUSEEVENTF_MOVE being set, dx and dy
hold information about that motion. The information is given as absolute or
relative integer values.
If
MOUSEEVENTF_ABSOLUTE value is specified, dx and dy contain
normalized absolute coordinates between 0 and 65,535. The event procedure maps
these coordinates onto the display surface. Coordinate (0,0) maps onto the
upper-left corner of the display surface, (65535,65535) maps onto the
lower-right corner.
If the
MOUSEEVENTF_ABSOLUTE value is not specified, dx and dy specify
relative motions from when the last mouse event was generated (the last
reported position). Positive values mean the mouse moved right (or down);
negative values mean the mouse moved left (or up).
Relative
mouse motion is subject to the effects of the mouse speed and the two mouse
threshold values. In Windows NT, an end user sets these three values with the
Mouse Tracking Speed slider of Control Panel s Mouse option; in Windows 95, an
end user sets them with the Pointer Speed slider of the Control Panel s Mouse
property sheet. An application obtains and sets these values with the SystemParametersInfo
The operating
system applies two tests to the specified relative mouse motion. If the
specified distance along either the x or y axis is greater than the first mouse
threshold value, and the mouse speed is not zero, the operating system doubles
the distance. If the specified distance along either the x or y axis is greater
than the second mouse threshold value, and the mouse speed is equal to two, the
operating system doubles the distance that resulted from applying the first
threshold test. It is thus possible for the operating system to multiply
relatively-specified mouse motion along the x or y axis by up to four times.
The mouse_event
function is used to synthesize mouse events by applications that need to do so.
It is also used by applications that need to obtain more information from the
mouse than its position and button state. For example, if a tablet manufacturer
wants to pass pen-based information to its own applications, it can write a
dynamic-link library (DLL) that communicates directly to the tablet hardware,
obtains the extra information, and saves it in a queue. The DLL then calls mouse_event
with the standard button and x/y position data, along with, in the dwExtraInfo
parameter, some pointer or index to the queued extra information. When the application
needs the extra information, it calls the DLL with the pointer or index stored
in dwExtraInfo, and the DLL returns the extra information.
See Also