QCursor¶

Detailed Description¶
This class is mainly used to create mouse cursors that are associated with particular widgets and to get and set the position of the mouse cursor.
Qt has a number of standard cursor shapes, but you can also make custom cursor shapes based on a
QBitmap, a mask and a hotspot.To associate a cursor with a widget, use
setCursor(). To associate a cursor with all widgets (normally for a short period of time), usesetOverrideCursor().To set a cursor shape use
setShape()or use theQCursorconstructor which takes the shape as argument, or you can use one of the predefined cursors defined in theCursorShapeenum.If you want to create a cursor with your own bitmap, either use the
QCursorconstructor which takes a bitmap and a mask or the constructor which takes a pixmap as arguments.To set or get the position of the mouse cursor use the static methods
pos()andsetPos().Note
It is possible to create a
QCursorbeforeQGuiApplication, but it is not useful except as a place-holder for a realQCursorcreated afterQGuiApplication. Attempting to use aQCursorthat was created beforeQGuiApplicationwill result in a crash.
A Note for X11 Users¶
On X11, Qt supports the Xcursor library, which allows for full color icon themes. The table below shows the cursor name used for each
CursorShapevalue. If a cursor cannot be found using the name shown below, a standard X11 cursor will be used instead. Note: X11 does not provide appropriate cursors for all possibleCursorShapevalues. It is possible that some cursors will be taken from the Xcursor theme, while others will use an internal bitmap cursor.
Shape
CursorShapeValueCursor Name
Shape
CursorShapeValueCursor Name
ArrowCursor
left_ptr
SizeVerCursor
size_ver
UpArrowCursor
up_arrow
SizeHorCursor
size_hor
CrossCursor
cross
SizeBDiagCursor
size_bdiag
IBeamCursor
ibeam
SizeFDiagCursor
size_fdiag
WaitCursor
wait
SizeAllCursor
size_all
BusyCursor
left_ptr_watch
SplitVCursor
split_v
ForbiddenCursor
forbidden
SplitHCursor
split_h
PointingHandCursor
pointing_hand
OpenHandCursor
openhand
WhatsThisCursor
whats_this
ClosedHandCursor
closedhand
DragMoveCursor
dnd-moveormove
DragCopyCursor
dnd-copyorcopy
DragLinkCursor
dnd-linkorlinkSee also
-
class
QCursor¶ Constructs a cursor with the default arrow shape.
Constructs a cursor with the specified
shape.See
CursorShapefor a list of shapes.See also
Constructs a custom bitmap cursor.
bitmapandmaskmake up the bitmap.hotXandhotYdefine the cursor’s hot spot.If
hotXis negative, it is set to thebitmap().width()/2. IfhotYis negative, it is set to thebitmap().height()/2.The cursor
bitmap(B) andmask(M) bits are combined like this:B=1 and M=1 gives black.
B=0 and M=1 gives white.
B=0 and M=0 gives transparent.
B=1 and M=0 gives an XOR’d result under Windows, undefined results on all other platforms.
Use the global Qt color
color0to draw 0-pixels andcolor1to draw 1-pixels in the bitmaps.Valid cursor sizes depend on the display hardware (or the underlying window system). We recommend using 32 x 32 cursors, because this size is supported on all platforms. Some platforms also support 16 x 16, 48 x 48, and 64 x 64 cursors.
See also
QBitmap()setMask()Constructs a custom pixmap cursor.
pixmapis the image. It is usual to give it a mask (set usingsetMask()).hotXandhotYdefine the cursor’s hot spot.If
hotXis negative, it is set to thepixmap().width()/2. IfhotYis negative, it is set to thepixmap().height()/2.Valid cursor sizes depend on the display hardware (or the underlying window system). We recommend using 32 x 32 cursors, because this size is supported on all platforms. Some platforms also support 16 x 16, 48 x 48, and 64 x 64 cursors.
See also
QPixmap()setMask()
-
PySide2.QtGui.QCursor.bitmap()¶ - Return type
Returns the cursor bitmap, or
Noneif it is one of the standard cursors.
-
PySide2.QtGui.QCursor.hotSpot()¶ - Return type
QPoint
Returns the cursor hot spot, or (0, 0) if it is one of the standard cursors.
-
PySide2.QtGui.QCursor.mask()¶ - Return type
Returns the cursor bitmap mask, or
Noneif it is one of the standard cursors.
-
PySide2.QtGui.QCursor.pixmap()¶ - Return type
Returns the cursor pixmap. This is only valid if the cursor is a pixmap cursor.
-
static
PySide2.QtGui.QCursor.pos()¶ - Return type
QPoint
Returns the position of the cursor (hot spot) of the primary screen in global screen coordinates.
You can call
mapFromGlobal()to translate it to widget coordinates.Note
The position is queried from the windowing system. If mouse events are generated via other means (e.g., via QWindowSystemInterface in a unit test), those fake mouse moves will not be reflected in the returned value.
Note
On platforms where there is no windowing system or cursors are not available, the returned position is based on the mouse move events generated via QWindowSystemInterface.
See also
setPos()mapFromGlobal()mapToGlobal()primaryScreen()
-
static
PySide2.QtGui.QCursor.pos(screen)¶ - Parameters
screen –
QScreen- Return type
QPoint
Returns the position of the cursor (hot spot) of the
screenin global screen coordinates.You can call
mapFromGlobal()to translate it to widget coordinates.See also
setPos()mapFromGlobal()mapToGlobal()
-
static
PySide2.QtGui.QCursor.setPos(screen, p)¶ - Parameters
screen –
QScreenp –
QPoint
-
static
PySide2.QtGui.QCursor.setPos(screen, x, y)¶ - Parameters
screen –
QScreenx –
inty –
int
Moves the cursor (hot spot) of the
screento the global screen position (x,y).You can call
mapToGlobal()to translate widget coordinates to global screen coordinates.Note
Calling this function results in changing the cursor position through the windowing system. The windowing system will typically respond by sending mouse events to the application’s window. This means that the usage of this function should be avoided in unit tests and everywhere where fake mouse events are being injected via QWindowSystemInterface because the windowing system’s mouse state (with regards to buttons for example) may not match the state in the application-generated events.
Note
On platforms where there is no windowing system or cursors are not available, this function may do nothing.
See also
pos()mapFromGlobal()mapToGlobal()
-
static
PySide2.QtGui.QCursor.setPos(p)¶ - Parameters
p –
QPoint
This is an overloaded function.
Moves the cursor (hot spot) to the global screen position at point
p.
-
static
PySide2.QtGui.QCursor.setPos(x, y)¶ - Parameters
x –
inty –
int
Moves the cursor (hot spot) of the primary screen to the global screen position (
x,y).You can call
mapToGlobal()to translate widget coordinates to global screen coordinates.See also
pos()mapFromGlobal()mapToGlobal()primaryScreen()
-
PySide2.QtGui.QCursor.setShape(newShape)¶ - Parameters
newShape –
CursorShape
Sets the cursor to the shape identified by
shape.See
CursorShapefor the list of cursor shapes.See also
-
PySide2.QtGui.QCursor.shape()¶ - Return type
CursorShape
Returns the cursor shape identifier. The return value is one of the
CursorShapeenum values (cast to an int).See also
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