Restrict mouse cursor movement
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Hello,
Do you mean something like this windows function but crossplatform?
Yes I mean it exactly like that.
And Mainwindow cannot just be fullscreen?
It is in a pseudo full screen because of a bug in Qt (I have opengl widget embeded that prevents full screen from working properly). Additionally, even if put in full screen the cursor is not clipped to an area, because there are multiple screens, so Qt allows the cursor to escape (which is of course an expected behavior).
Kind regards.
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@kshegunov said:
may be you can get some information from this-
http://www.codeprogress.com/cpp/libraries/qt/QtHideMouseCursor.php -
@mrjj
Right? Me neither. The only thing I could fathom was to grab the mouse, but then my child widgets don't get anything. Maybe I could manually dispatch the messages, but it does seem weird.@Rahul-Sharma
Sorry, but does me no good. I'm not after changing the cursor image, but disallowing it to leave a certain area instead. Thanks for the suggestion, though. -
@kshegunov
Not sure how much worked there is to self dispatch messages.
My use case for for demo to disallow people go clicking on other tings, so i ended up
with timer, moving the mouse back if it has moved outside.
While not limiting it for real. it was impossible to click on stuff outside.
Still not a good solution but fine for the 2 hours demo.What is your use case`? if i may ask.
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@mrjj
Sure, I don't like secrets, that's why I prefer Linux ;P
It's for my pet project - a proof of concept Qt based game. I think I've mentioned it to you. I need to restrict the mouse from leaving the main window, because there is an action I wish to attach to certain area near the edges of the window, namely to allow the player to move around the world with the mouse. -
@kshegunov
hehe.
Yes you mentioned pet :)
So In reality if opengl would go fullscreen it would just work.
Else I think grab is the best option. -
Some games do it this way:
- Hide the cursor (set to
Qt::BlankCursor
) - In mouse move event record a distance of the cursor from the center of your window (
QCursor::pos()
and window geometry). Use that distance to update your "virtual cursor" clipped to whatever region you want. - Move the cursor to the center of your window
- Draw your own cursor "in game" at the "virtual" position
In mouse clicks use your "virtual" position instead of the real one. If you also need to pass the moves to some widgets etc. then you can filter your window for mouse clicks, intercept and resend the events with your "virtual" position.
- Hide the cursor (set to
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@Chris-Kawa
Thanks for the suggestions, I'll think about it. They all seem to revolve around remapping the cursor, which I'm not sure will work for me, because I have Qt3D put into aQOpenGLWindow
and it handles the mouse events itself. Still, thank you again for taking the time.Kind regards.
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Hello,
It turned out to be incredibly simple in the end. There is a leave event (that was news for me) fired from Qt, to which it's possible to attach the necessary code (for anyone that might come to the same issue):void MyMainWindow::leaveEvent(QEvent * event) { // Get the window geometry & cursor position const QRect & rect = geometry(); QPoint position = QCursor::pos(); // Check the bounds qint32 x = qBound(rect.left(), position.x(), rect.right()); qint32 y = qBound(rect.top(), position.y(), rect.bottom()); // Adjust the cursor if (x != position.x() || y != position.y()) QCursor::setPos(x, y); event->accept(); QMainWindow::leaveEvent(event); }
Thanks to all for the help.
Kind regards.
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Ok, that i completely missed it had :)