2010-05-10 14:00:48 -06:00
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The XFIXES Extension
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2011-04-17 09:15:09 -06:00
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Version 5.0
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Document Revision 1
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2010-11-15
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2010-05-10 14:00:48 -06:00
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Keith Packard
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keithp@keithp.com
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1. Introduction
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X applications have often needed to work around various shortcomings in the
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core X window system. This extension is designed to provide the minimal
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server-side support necessary to eliminate problems caused by these
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workarounds.
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2. Acknowledgements
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This extension is a direct result of requests made by application
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developers, in particular,
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+ Owen Taylor for describing the issues raised with the XEMBED
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mechanisms and SaveSet processing and his initial extension
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2011-04-17 09:15:09 -06:00
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to handle this issue, and for pointer barriers
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2010-05-10 14:00:48 -06:00
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+ Bill Haneman for the design for cursor image tracking.
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+ Havoc Pennington
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+ Fredrik Höglund for cursor names
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+ Deron Johnson for cursor visibility
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3. Basic Premise
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Requests in this extension may seem to wander all over the map of X server
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capabilities, but they are tied by a simple rule -- resolving issues raised
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by application interaction with core protocol mechanisms that cannot be
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adequately worked around on the client side of the wire.
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4. Extension initialization
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The client must negotiate the version of the extension before executing
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extension requests. Behavior of the server is undefined otherwise.
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QueryVersion
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client-major-version: CARD32
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client-minor-version: CARD32
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->
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major-version: CARD32
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minor-version: CARD32
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The client sends the highest supported version to the server and
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the server sends the highest version it supports, but no higher than
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the requested version. Major versions changes can introduce
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new requests, minor version changes introduce only adjustments to
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existing requests or backward compatible changes. It is
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the clients responsibility to ensure that the server supports
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a version which is compatible with its expectations.
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************* XFIXES VERSION 1 OR BETTER ***********
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5. Save Set processing changes
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Embedding one application within another provides a way of unifying
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disparate documents and views within a single framework. From the X
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protocol perspective, this appears similar to nested window managers; the
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embedding application "manages" the embedded windows much as a window
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manager does for top-level windows. To protect the embedded application
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from embedding application failure, it is reasonable to use the core SaveSet
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mechanism so that embedding application failure causes embedded windows to
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be preserved instead of destroyed.
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The core save set mechanism defines the target for each save set member
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window as the nearest enclosing window not owned by the terminating client.
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For embedding applications, this nearest window is usually the window
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manager frame. The problem here is that the window manager will not
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generally expect to receive and correctly manage new windows appearing within
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that window by the save set mechanism, and will instead destroy the frame
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window in response to the client window destruction. This causes the
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embedded window to be destroyed.
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An easy fix for this problem is to change the target of the save set member
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to a window which won't be affected by the underlying window destruction.
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XFIXES chooses the root window as the target.
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Having embedded windows suddenly appear at the top level can confuse users,
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so XFIXES also lets the client select whether the window should end up
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unmapped after the save set processing instead of unconditionally making
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them be mapped.
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5.1 Requests
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ChangeSaveSet
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window: Window
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mode: { Insert, Delete }
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target: { Nearest, Root }
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map: { Map, Unmap }
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ChangeSaveSet is an extension of the core protocol ChangeSaveSet
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request. As in that request, mode specifies whether the indicated
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window is inserted or deleted from the save-set. Target specifies
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whether the window is reparented to the nearest non-client window as
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in the core protocol, or reparented to the root window. Map
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specifies whether the window is mapped as in the core protocol or
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unmapped.
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6. Selection Tracking
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Applications wishing to monitor the contents of current selections must
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poll for selection changes. XFIXES improves this by providing an event
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delivered whenever the selection ownership changes.
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6.1 Types
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SELECTIONEVENT { SetSelectionOwner,
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SelectionWindowDestroy,
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SelectionClientClose }
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6.1 Events
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SelectionNotify
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subtype: SELECTIONEVENT
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window: Window
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owner: Window
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selection: Atom
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timestamp: Timestamp
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selection-timestamp: Timestamp
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6.2 Requests
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SelectSelectionInput
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window: Window
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selection: Atom
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event-mask: SETofSELECTIONEVENT
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Selects for events to be delivered to window when various causes of
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ownership of selection occur. Subtype indicates the cause of the
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selection ownership change. Owner is set to the current selection
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owner, or None. Timestamp indicates the time the event was
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generated while selection-timestamp indicates the timestamp used to
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own the selection.
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7. Cursor Image Monitoring
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Mirroring the screen contents is easily done with the core protocol or VNC
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addons, except for the current cursor image. There is no way using the core
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protocol to discover which cursor image is currently displayed. The
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cursor image often contains significant semantic content about the user
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interface. XFIXES provides a simple mechanism to discover when the cursor
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image changes and to fetch the current cursor image.
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As the current cursor may or may not have any XID associated with it, there
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is no stable name available. Instead, XFIXES returns only the image of the
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current cursor and provides a way to identify cursor images to avoid
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refetching the image each time it changes to a previously seen cursor.
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7.1 Types
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CURSOREVENT { DisplayCursor }
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7.2 Events
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CursorNotify
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subtype: CURSOREVENT
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window: Window
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cursor-serial: CARD32
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timestamp: Timestamp
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name: Atom (Version 2 only)
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7.3 Requests
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SelectCursorInput
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window: Window
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event-mask: SETofCURSOREVENT
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This request directs cursor change events to the named window.
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Events will be delivered irrespective of the screen on which they
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occur. Subtype indicates the cause of the cursor image change
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(there is only one subtype at present). Cursor-serial is a number
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assigned to the cursor image which identifies the image. Cursors
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with different serial numbers may have different images. Timestamp
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is the time of the cursor change.
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Servers supporting the X Input Extension Version 2.0 or higher only
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notify the clients of cursor change events for the ClientPointer, not
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of any other master pointer (see Section 4.4. in the XI2 protocol
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specificiation).
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GetCursorImage
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->
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x: INT16
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y: INT16
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width: CARD16
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height: CARD16
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x-hot: CARD16
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y-hot: CARD16
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cursor-serial: CARD32
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cursor-image: LISTofCARD32
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GetCursorImage returns the image of the current cursor. X and y are
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the current cursor position. Width and height are the size of the
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cursor image. X-hot and y-hot mark the hotspot within the cursor
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image. Cursor-serial provides the number assigned to this cursor
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image, this same serial number will be reported in a CursorNotify
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event if this cursor image is redisplayed in the future.
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The cursor image itself is returned as a single image at 32 bits per
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pixel with 8 bits of alpha in the most significant 8 bits of the
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pixel followed by 8 bits each of red, green and finally 8 bits of
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blue in the least significant 8 bits. The color components are
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pre-multiplied with the alpha component.
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************* XFIXES VERSION 2 OR BETTER ***********
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8. Region Objects
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The core protocol doesn't expose regions as a primitive object and this
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makes many operations more complicated than they really need to be. Adding
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region objects simplifies expose handling, the Shape extension and other
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operations. These operations are also designed to support a separate
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extension, the X Damage Extension.
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8.1 Types
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Region: XID
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WINDOW_REGION_KIND: { Bounding, Clip }
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8.2 Errors
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Region The specified region is invalid
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8.3 Requests
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CreateRegion
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region: REGION
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rects: LISTofRECTANGLE
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Creates a region initialized to the specified list of rectangles.
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The rectangles may be specified in any order, their union becomes
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the region. The core protocol allows applications to specify an
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order for the rectangles, but it turns out to be just as hard to
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verify the rectangles are actually in that order as it is to simply
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ignore the ordering information and union them together. Hence,
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this request dispenses with the ordering information.
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Errors: IDChoice
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CreateRegionFromBitmap
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region: REGION
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bitmap: PIXMAP
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Creates a region initialized to the set of 'one' pixels in bitmap
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(which must be depth 1, else Match error).
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Errors: Pixmap, IDChoice, Match
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CreateRegionFromWindow
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window: Window
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kind: WINDOW_REGION_KIND
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region: Region
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Creates a region initialized to the specified window region. See the
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Shape extension for the definition of Bounding and Clip regions.
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Errors: Window, IDChoice, Value
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CreateRegionFromGC
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gc: GContext
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region: Region
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Creates a region initialized from the clip list of the specified
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GContext.
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Errors: GContext, IDChoice
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CreateRegionFromPicture
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picture: Picture
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region: Region
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Creates a region initialized from the clip list of the specified
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Picture.
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Errors: Picture, IDChoice
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DestroyRegion
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region: Region
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Destroys the specified region.
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Errors: Region
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SetRegion
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region: Region
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rects: LISTofRECTANGLE
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This replaces the current contents of region with the region formed
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by the union of rects.
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CopyRegion
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source: Region
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destination: Region
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This replaces the contents of destination with the contents of
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source.
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UnionRegion
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IntersectRegion
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SubtractRegion
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source1: Region
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source2: Region
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destination: Region
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Combines source1 and source2, placing the result in destination.
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Destination may be the same as either source1 or source2.
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Errors: Region, Value
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InvertRegion
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source: Region
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bounds: RECTANGLE
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destination: Region
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The source region is subtracted from the region specified by
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bounds. The result is placed in destination, replacing its contents.
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Errors: Region
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TranslateRegion
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region: Region
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dx, dy: INT16
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The region is translated by dx, dy in place.
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Errors: Region
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RegionExtents
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source: Region
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destination: Region
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The extents of the source region are placed in the destination
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FetchRegion
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region: Region
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->
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extents: RECTANGLE
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rectangles: LISTofRECTANGLE
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The region is returned as a list of rectangles in YX-banded order.
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Errors: Region
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SetGCClipRegion
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gc: GCONTEXT
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clip-x-origin, clip-y-origin: INT16
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region: Region or None
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This request changes clip-mask in gc to the specified region and
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sets the clip origin. Output will be clipped to remain contained
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within the region. The clip origin is interpreted relative to the
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origin of whatever destination drawable is specified in a graphics
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request. The region is interpreted relative to the clip origin.
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Future changes to region have no effect on the gc clip-mask.
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Errors: GContext, Region
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SetWindowShapeRegion
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dest: Window
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destKind: SHAPE_KIND
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xOff, yOff: INT16
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region: Region or None
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This request sets the specified (by destKind) Shape extension region
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of the window to region, offset by xOff and yOff. Future changes to
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region have no effect on the window shape.
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Errors: Window, Value, Region
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SetPictureClipRegion
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picture: Picture
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clip-x-origin, clip-y-origin: INT16
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region: Region or None
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This request changes clip-mask in picture to the specified region
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and sets the clip origin. Input and output will be clipped to
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remain contained within the region. The clip origin is interpreted
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relative to the origin of the drawable associated with picture. The
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region is interpreted relative to the clip origin. Future changes
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to region have no effect on the picture clip-mask.
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Errors: Picture, Region
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9. Cursor Names
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Attaching names to cursors permits some abstract semantic content to be
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associated with specific cursor images. Reflecting those names back to
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applications allows that semantic content to be related to the user through
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non-visual means.
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9.1 Events
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CursorNotify
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subtype: CURSOREVENT
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window: Window
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cursor-serial: CARD32
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timestamp: Timestamp
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name: Atom or None
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In Version 2 of the XFIXES protocol, this event adds the atom
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of any name associated with the current cursor (else None).
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9.2 Requests
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SetCursorName
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cursor: CURSOR
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name: LISTofCARD8
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This request interns name as an atom and sets that atom as the name
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of cursor.
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Errors: Cursor
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GetCursorName
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cursor: CURSOR
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->
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atom: ATOM or None
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name: LISTofCARD8
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This request returns the name and atom of cursor. If no name is
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set, atom is None and name is empty.
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Errors: Cursor
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GetCursorImageAndName
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->
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x: INT16
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y: INT16
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width: CARD16
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height: CARD16
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x-hot: CARD16
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y-hot: CARD16
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cursor-serial: CARD32
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cursor-atom: ATOM
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cursor-name: LISTofCARD8
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cursor-image: LISTofCARD32
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This is similar to GetCursorImage except for including both
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the atom and name of the current cursor.
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ChangeCursor
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source, destination: CURSOR
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This request replaces all references to the destination with a
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reference to source. Any existing uses of the destination cursor
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object will now show the source cursor image.
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ChangeCursorByName
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src: CURSOR
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name: LISTofCARD8
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This request replaces the contents of all cursors with the specified
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name with the src cursor.
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************* XFIXES VERSION 3 OR BETTER ***********
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10. Region Expansion
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This update provides another operation on the region objects defined in
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Section 8 of this document.
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10.1 Requests
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ExpandRegion
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source: REGION
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destination: REGION
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left, right, top, bottom: CARD16
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Creates destination region containing the area specified by
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expanding each rectangle in the source region by the specified
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number of pixels to the left, right, top and bottom.
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************* XFIXES VERSION 4 OR BETTER ***********
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11. Cursor Visibility
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Composite managers may want to render the cursor themselves instead of
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|
relying on the X server sprite drawing, this provides a way for them to
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do so without getting a double cursor image.
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11.1 Requests
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HideCursor
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window: WINDOW
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A client sends this request to indicate that it wants the
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cursor image to be hidden (i.e. to not be displayed) when
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the sprite is inside the specified window, or one of its
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subwindows. If the sprite is inside a window for which one
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|
or more active clients have requested cursor hiding then the
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cursor image will not be displayed.
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Note that even though cursor hiding causes the cursor image
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to be invisible, CursorNotify events will still be sent
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normally, as if the cursor image were visible.
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If, during a grab, one or more active clients have requested
|
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cursor hiding for grab window, or one of its ancestors, the
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cursor image of the grab cursor will not be displayed during
|
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|
the lifetime of that grab.
|
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When a client with outstanding cursor hiding requests
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|
terminates its connection these requests will be deleted.
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Servers supporting the X Input Extension Version 2.0 or higher hide
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all visible cursors in response to a HideCursor request. If a master
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|
pointer is created while the cursors are hidden, this master pointer's
|
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|
cursor will be hidden as well.
|
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|
ShowCursor
|
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window: WINDOW
|
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|
|
A client sends this request to indicate that it wants the
|
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|
|
cursor image to be displayed when the sprite is inside the
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|
|
specified window, or one of its subwindows. If the sprite
|
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|
|
is inside a window for which no active clients have requested
|
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|
|
cursor hiding then the cursor image for that window will be
|
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|
displayed. In other words, if a client calls HideCursor for
|
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|
a specified window, or window subtree, this request reverses
|
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|
the effects of the HideCursor request.
|
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|
If the client has made no outstanding HideCursor requests
|
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|
a BadMatch error is generated.
|
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|
|
Servers supporting the X Input Extension Version 2.0 or higher show
|
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|
|
all visible cursors in response to a ShowCursor request.
|
|
|
|
|
2011-04-17 09:15:09 -06:00
|
|
|
************* XFIXES VERSION 5 OR BETTER ***********
|
|
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|
|
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|
|
12. Pointer Barriers
|
|
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|
|
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|
|
Compositing managers and desktop environments may have UI elements in
|
|
|
|
particular screen locations such that for a single-headed display they
|
|
|
|
correspond to easy targets according to Fitt's Law, for example, the top
|
|
|
|
left corner. For a multi-headed environment these corners should still be
|
|
|
|
semi-impermeable. Pointer barriers allow the application to define
|
|
|
|
additional constraint on cursor motion so that these areas behave as
|
|
|
|
expected even in the face of multiple displays.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Absolute positioning devices like touchscreens do not obey pointer barriers.
|
|
|
|
There's no advantage to target acquisition to do so, since on a touchscreen
|
|
|
|
all points are in some sense equally large, whereas for a relative
|
|
|
|
positioning device the edges and corners are infinitely large.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
WarpPointer and similar requests do not obey pointer barriers, for
|
|
|
|
essentially the same reason.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
12.1 Types
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
BARRIER: XID
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
BarrierDirections
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
BarrierPositiveX: 1 << 0
|
|
|
|
BarrierPositiveY: 1 << 1
|
|
|
|
BarrierNegativeX: 1 << 2
|
|
|
|
BarrierNegativeY: 1 << 3
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
12.2 Errors
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Barrier
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
12.3 Requests
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CreatePointerBarrier
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
barrier: BARRIER
|
|
|
|
drawable: DRAWABLE
|
|
|
|
x1, y2, x2, y2: INT16
|
|
|
|
directions: CARD32
|
|
|
|
devices: LISTofDEVICEID
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Creates a pointer barrier along the line specified by the given
|
|
|
|
coordinates on the screen associated with the given drawable. The
|
|
|
|
barrier has no spatial extent; it is simply a line along the left
|
|
|
|
or top edge of the specified pixels. Barrier coordinates are in
|
|
|
|
screen space.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
The coordinates must be axis aligned, either x1 == x2, or
|
|
|
|
y1 == y2, but not both. The varying coordinates may be specified
|
|
|
|
in any order. For x1 == x2, either y1 > y2 or y1 < y2 is valid.
|
|
|
|
If the coordinates are not valid BadValue is generated.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Motion is allowed through the barrier in the directions specified:
|
|
|
|
setting the BarrierPositiveX bit allows travel through the barrier
|
|
|
|
in the positive X direction, etc. Nonsensical values (forbidding Y
|
|
|
|
axis travel through a vertical barrier, for example) and excess set
|
|
|
|
bits are ignored.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
If the server supports the X Input Extension version 2 or higher,
|
|
|
|
the devices element names a set of master device to apply the
|
|
|
|
barrier to. If XIAllDevices or XIAllMasterDevices are given, the
|
|
|
|
barrier applies to all master devices. If a slave device is named,
|
|
|
|
BadDevice is generated; this does not apply to slave devices named
|
|
|
|
implicitly by XIAllDevices. Naming a device multiple times is
|
|
|
|
legal, and is treated as though it were named only once. If a
|
|
|
|
device is removed, the barrier continues to apply to the remaining
|
|
|
|
devices, but will not apply to any future device with the same ID
|
|
|
|
as the removed device. Nothing special happens when all matching
|
|
|
|
devices are removed; barriers must be explicitly destroyed.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Errors: IDChoice, Window, Value, Device
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
DestroyPointerBarrier
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
barrier: BARRIER
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Destroys the named barrier.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Errors: Barrier
|
|
|
|
|
2010-05-10 14:00:48 -06:00
|
|
|
99. Future compatibility
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
This extension is not expected to remain fixed. Future changes will
|
|
|
|
strive to remain compatible if at all possible. The X server will always
|
|
|
|
support version 1 of the extension protocol if requested by a client.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Additions to the protocol will always by marked by minor version number
|
|
|
|
changes so that applications will be able to detect what requests are
|
|
|
|
supported.
|