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A mouse is either connected to a serial port or directly to the
AT bus and different types of mouse send distinct kinds of data, which makes
mouse programming a bit harder.
But, Andrew Haylett was so kind as to put a generous copyright on his
selection program which means you can use his mouse routines for
your own programs. Included in this guide you can find the pre-release
of selection-1.8 with the COPYRIGHT notice.
X11 already offers a comfortable mouse API, so Andrew's routines should
be used for non-X11 applications only.
You only need the modules mouse.c and mouse.h from the selection package.
To get mouse events you basically have to call ms_init() and get_ms_event().
ms_init needs the following 10 arguments:
- int acceleration
is the acceleration factor. If you move the mouse more than
delta pixels, motion becomes faster depending on this value. - int baud
is the bps rate your mouse uses (normally 1200). - int delta
this is the number of pixels that you have to move the mouse before
the acceleration starts. - char *device
is the name of your mouse device (e.g. /dev/mouse). - int toggle
toggle the DTR, RTS or both DTR and RTS mouse modem lines on
initialization (normally 0). - int sample
the resolution (dpi) of your mouse (normally 100). - mouse_type mouse
the identifier of the connected mouse like P_MSC (Mouse Systems Corp.)
for my mouse ;). - int slack
amount of slack for wraparound which means if slack is -1 a try to move the
mouse over the screen border will leave the mouse at the border.
Values >= 0 mean that the mouse cursor will wrap to the other end after
moving the mouse slack pixels against the border. - int maxx
the resolution of your current terminal in x direction. With the
default font, a char is 10 pixels wide, and therefore the overall
x screen resolution is 10*80-1. - int maxy
the resolution of your current terminal in y direction. With the
default font, a char is 12 pixels high and therefore the overall
y screen resolution is 12*25-1.
get_ms_event() just needs a pointer to a struct ms_event.
If get_ms_event() returns -1, an error occured. On success, it
returns 0, and the struct ms_event will contain the actual mouse state.
Next: 9.2 Modem Programming
Up: 9 Programming I/O ports
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Converted on:
Fri Mar 29 14:43:04 EST 1996
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