2545 lines
106 KiB
Plaintext
2545 lines
106 KiB
Plaintext
X11 Input Extension Protocol Specification
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Version 1.0
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X Consortium Standard
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X Version 11, Release 6.8
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Mark Patrick, Ardent Computer
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George Sachs, Hewlett-Packard
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Version 1.5
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Peter Hutterer
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Copyright © 1989, 1990, 1991 by Hewlett-Packard Company and
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Ardent Computer
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Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this
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documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby
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granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this
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permission notice appear in all copies. Ardent and
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Hewlett-Packard make no representations about the suitability
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for any purpose of the information in this document. It is
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provided "as is" without express or implied warranty. Copyright
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© 1989, 1990, 1991, 1992 X Consortium
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Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person
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obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation
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files (the “Software”), to deal in the Software without
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restriction, including without limitation the rights to use,
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copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or
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sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
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Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following
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conditions:
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The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
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included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
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THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED “AS IS”, WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
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EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES
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OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
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NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE X CONSORTIUM BE LIABLE
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FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION
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OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
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CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN
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THE SOFTWARE.
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Except as contained in this notice, the name of the X
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Consortium shall not be used in advertising or otherwise to
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promote the sale, use or other dealings in this Software
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without prior written authorization from the X Consortium. X
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Window System is a trademark of The Open Group.
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Copyright © 2008 by Peter Hutterer
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Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person
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obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation
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files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without
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restriction, including without limitation the rights to use,
|
|
copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or
|
|
sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the
|
|
Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following
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conditions:
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The above copyright notice and this permission notice
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(including the next paragraph) shall be included in all copies
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or substantial portions of the Software.
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THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
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EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES
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OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND
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NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT
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HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY,
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WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING
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FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR
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OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.
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1. Input Extension Overview
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This document defines an extension to the X11 protocol to
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support input devices other than the core X keyboard and
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pointer. An accompanying document defines a corresponding
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extension to Xlib (similar extensions for languages other than
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C are anticipated). This first section gives an overview of the
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input extension. The next section defines the new protocol
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requests defined by the extension. We conclude with a
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description of the new input events generated by the additional
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input devices.
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This document only describes the behaviour of servers supporting
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up to the X Input Extension 1.5. For servers supporting the X
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Input Extensions 2.0, see XI2proto.txt. New clients are discouraged
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from using this protocol specification. Instead, the use of XI 2.x
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is recommended.
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1.1 Design Approach
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The design approach of the extension is to define requests and
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events analogous to the core requests and events. This allows
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extension input devices to be individually distinguishable from
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each other and from the core input devices. These requests and
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events make use of a device identifier and support the
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reporting of n-dimensional motion data as well as other data
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that is not reportable via the core input events.
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1.2 Core Input Devices
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The X server core protocol supports two input devices: a
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pointer and a keyboard. The pointer device has two major
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functions. First, it may be used to generate motion information
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that client programs can detect. Second, it may also be used to
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indicate the current location and focus of the X keyboard. To
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accomplish this, the server echoes a cursor at the current
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position of the X pointer. Unless the X keyboard has been
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explicitly focused, this cursor also shows the current location
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and focus of the X keyboard. The X keyboard is used to generate
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input that client programs can detect.
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In servers supporting XI 1.4 and above, the core pointer and
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the core keyboard are virtual devices that do not represent a
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physical device connected to the host computer.
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In servers supporting XI 2.0 and above, there may be multiple
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core pointers and keyboards. Refer to XI2proto.txt for more
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information.
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The X keyboard and X pointer are referred to in this document
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as the core devices, and the input events they generate
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(KeyPress, KeyRelease, ButtonPress, ButtonRelease, and
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MotionNotify) are known as the core input events. All other
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input devices are referred to as extension input devices and
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the input events they generate are referred to as extension
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input events.
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In servers supporting only XI 1.x, this input extension does
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not change the behavior or functionality of the core input
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devices, core events, or core protocol requests, with the
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exception of the core grab requests. These requests may affect
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the synchronization of events from extension devices. See the
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explanation in the section titled "Event Synchronization and
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Core Grabs".
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Selection of the physical devices to be initially used by the
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server as the core devices is left implementation-dependent.
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Requests are defined that allow client programs to change which
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physical devices are used as the core devices.
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1.3 Extension Input Devices
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The input extension v1.x controls access to input devices other
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than the X keyboard and X pointer. It allows client programs to
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select input from these devices independently from each other
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and independently from the core devices.
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A client that wishes to access a specific device must first
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determine whether that device is connected to the X server.
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This is done through the ListInputDevices request, which will
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return a list of all devices that can be opened by the X
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server. A client can then open one or more of these devices
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using the OpenDevice request, specify what events they are
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interested in receiving, and receive and process input events
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from extension devices in the same way as events from the X
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keyboard and X pointer. Input events from these devices are of
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extension types ( DeviceKeyPress, DeviceKeyRelease,
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DeviceButtonPress, DeviceButtonRelease, DeviceMotionNotify,
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etc.) and contain a device identifier so that events of the
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same type coming from different input devices can be
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distinguished.
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Any kind of input device may be used as an extension input
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device. Extension input devices may have 0 or more keys, 0 or
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more buttons, and may report 0 or more axes of motion. Motion
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may be reported as relative movements from a previous position
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or as an absolute position. All valuators reporting motion
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information for a given extension input device must report the
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same kind of motion information (absolute or relative).
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This extension is designed to accommodate new types of input
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devices that may be added in the future. The protocol requests
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that refer to specific characteristics of input devices
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organize that information by input classes. Server implementors
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may add new classes of input devices without changing the
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protocol requests. Input classes are unique numbers registered
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with the X Consortium. Each extension input device may support
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multiple input classes.
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In XI 1.x, all extension input devices are treated like the
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core X keyboard in determining their location and focus. The
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server does not track the location of these devices on an
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individual basis, and therefore does not echo a cursor to
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indicate their current location. Instead, their location is
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determined by the location of the core X pointer. Like the core
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X keyboard, some may be explicitly focused. If they are not
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explicitly focused, their focus is determined by the location
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of the core X pointer.
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Most input events reported by the server to a client are of
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fixed size (32 bytes). In order to represent the change in
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state of an input device the extension may need to generate a
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sequence of input events. A client side library (such as Xlib)
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will typically take these raw input events and format them into
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a form more convenient to the client.
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1.4 Event Classes
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In the core protocol a client registers interest in receiving
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certain input events directed to a window by modifying that
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window's event-mask. Most of the bits in the event mask are
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already used to specify interest in core X events. The input
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extension specifies a different mechanism by which a client can
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express interest in events generated by this extension.
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When a client opens a extension input device via the OpenDevice
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request, an XDevice structure is returned. Macros are provided
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that extract 32-bit numbers called event classes from that
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structure, that a client can use to register interest in
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extension events via the SelectExtensionEvent request. The
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event class combines the desired event type and device id, and
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may be thought of as the equivalent of core event masks.
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1.5 Input Classes
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Some of the input extension requests divide input devices into
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classes based on their functionality. This is intended to allow
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new classes of input devices to be defined at a later time
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without changing the semantics of these requests. The following
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input device classes are currently defined:
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KEY
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The device reports key events.
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BUTTON
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The device reports button events.
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VALUATOR
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The device reports valuator data in motion events.
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PROXIMITY
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The device reports proximity events.
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FOCUS
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The device can be focused and reports focus events.
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FEEDBACK
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The device supports feedbacks.
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OTHER
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The ChangeDeviceNotify, DeviceMappingNotify, and
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DeviceStateNotify macros may be invoked passing the
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XDevice structure returned for this device.
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Each extension input device may support multiple input classes.
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Additional classes may be added in the future. Requests that
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support multiple input classes, such as the ListInputDevices
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function that lists all available input devices, organize the
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data they return by input class. Client programs that use these
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requests should not access data unless it matches a class
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defined at the time those clients were compiled. In this way,
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new classes can be added without forcing existing clients that
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use these requests to be recompiled.
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2. Requests
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Extension input devices are accessed by client programs through
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the use of new protocol requests. This section summarizes the
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new requests defined by this extension. The syntax and type
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definitions used below follow the notation used for the X11
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core protocol.
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2.1 Getting the Extension Version
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The GetExtensionVersion request returns version information
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about the input extension.
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GetExtensionVersion
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name: STRING
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=>
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present: BOOL
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protocol-major-version: CARD16
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protocol-minor-version: CARD16
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The protocol version numbers returned indicate the version of
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the input extension supported by the target X server. The
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version numbers can be compared to constants defined in the
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header file XI.h. Each version is a superset of the previous
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versions.
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The name must be the name of the Input Extension as defined
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in the header file XI.h.
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2.2 Listing Available Devices
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A client that wishes to access a specific device must first
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determine whether that device is connected to the X server.
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This is done through the ListInputDevices request, which will
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return a list of all devices that can be opened by the X
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server.
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ListInputDevices
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=>
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input-devices: ListOfDeviceInfo
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where
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DEVICEINFO:
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[type: ATOM
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id: CARD8
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num_classes: CARD8
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use: {IsXKeyboard, IsXPointer, IsXExtensionPointer,
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IsXExtensionKeyboard, IsExtensionDevice}
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info: LISTofINPUTINFO
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name: STRING8]
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INPUTINFO: {KEYINFO, BUTTONINFO, VALUATORINFO}
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KEYINFO:
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[class: CARD8
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length: CARD8
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min-keycode: KEYCODE
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max-keycode: KEYCODE
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num-keys: CARD16]
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BUTTONINFO:
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[class: CARD8
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length: CARD8
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num-buttons: CARD16]
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VALUATORINFO:
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[class: CARD8
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length: CARD8
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num_axes: CARD8
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mode: SETofDEVICEMODE
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motion_buffer_size: CARD32
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axes: LISTofAXISINFO]
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AXISINFO:
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[resolution: CARD32
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min-val: CARD32
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max-val: CARD32]
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DEVICEMODE: {Absolute, Relative}
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Errors: None
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This request returns a list of all devices that can be opened
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by the X server, including the core X keyboard and X pointer.
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Some implementations may open all input devices as part of X
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initialization, while others may not open an input device until
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requested to do so by a client program.
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The information returned for each device is as follows:
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type
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The type field is of type Atom and indicates the nature
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of the device. Clients may determine device types by
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invoking the XInternAtom request passing one of the
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names defined in the header file XI.h. The following
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names have been defined to date:
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MOUSE
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TABLET
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KEYBOARD
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TOUCHSCREEN
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TOUCHPAD
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BUTTONBOX
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BARCODE
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KNOB_BOX
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TRACKBALL
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QUADRATURE
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SPACEBALL
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DATAGLOVE
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EYETRACKER
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CURSORKEYS
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FOOTMOUSE
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ID_MODULE
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ONE_KNOB
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NINE_KNOB
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JOYSTICK
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id
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The id is a small cardinal value in the range 0-128 that
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uniquely identifies the device. It is assigned to the
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device when it is initialized by the server. Some
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implementations may not open an input device until
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requested by a client program, and may close the device
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when the last client accessing it requests that it be
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closed. If a device is opened by a client program via
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XOpenDevice, then closed via XCloseDevice, then opened
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again, it is not guaranteed to have the same id after
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the second open request.
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num_classes
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The num_classes field is a small cardinal value in the
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range 0-255 that specifies the number of input classes
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supported by the device for which information is
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returned by ListInputDevices. Some input classes, such
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as class Focus and class Proximity do not have any
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information to be returned by ListInputDevices.
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use
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The use field specifies how the device is currently
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being used. If the value is IsXKeyboard, the device is
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currently being used as the X keyboard. If the value is
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IsXPointer, the device is currently being used as the X
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pointer. If the value is IsXExtensionPointer, the device
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is available for use as an extension pointer. If the value
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is IsXExtensionKeyboard, the device is available for use as
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and extension keyboard.
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Older versions of XI report all extension devices as
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IsXExtensionDevice.
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name
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The name field contains a pointer to a null-terminated
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string that corresponds to one of the defined device
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types.
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InputInfo
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InputInfo is one of: KeyInfo, ButtonInfo or
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ValuatorInfo. The first two fields are common to all
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three:
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class
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The class field is a cardinal value in the range
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0-255. It uniquely identifies the class of input
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for which information is returned.
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length
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The length field is a cardinal value in the range
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0-255. It specifies the number of bytes of data
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that are contained in this input class. The length
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includes the class and length fields.
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The remaining information returned for input class
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KEYCLASS is as follows:
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min_keycode
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min_keycode is of type KEYCODE. It specifies the
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minimum keycode that the device will report. The
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minimum keycode will not be smaller than 8.
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max_keycode
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max_keycode is of type KEYCODE. It specifies the
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maximum keycode that the device will report. The
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maximum keycode will not be larger than 255.
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num_keys
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num_keys is a cardinal value that specifies the
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number of keys that the device has.
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The remaining information returned for input class
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BUTTONCLASS is as follows:
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num_buttons
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num_buttons is a cardinal value that specifies the
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number of buttons that the device has.
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The remaining information returned for input class
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VALUATORCLASS is as follows:
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mode
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mode is a constant that has one of the following
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values: Absolute or Relative. Some devices allow
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the mode to be changed dynamically via the
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SetDeviceMode request.
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motion_buffer_size
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motion_buffer_size is a cardinal number that
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specifies the number of elements that can be
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contained in the motion history buffer for the
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device.
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axes
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The axes field contains a pointer to an AXISINFO
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struture.
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The information returned for each axis reported by the
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device is:
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resolution
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The resolution is a cardinal value in
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counts/meter.
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min_val
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The min_val field is a cardinal value in that
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contains the minimum value the device reports for
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this axis. For devices whose mode is Relative, the
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min_val field will contain 0.
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max_val
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The max_val field is a cardinal value in that
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contains the maximum value the device reports for
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this axis. For devices whose mode is Relative, the
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max_val field will contain 0.
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2.3 Enabling Devices
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Client programs that wish to access an extension device must
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request that the server open that device. This is done via the
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OpenDevice request.
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OpenDevice
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id: CARD8
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=>
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DEVICE:
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[device_id: XID
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num_classes: INT32
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classes: LISTofINPUTCLASSINFO]
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INPUTCLASSINFO:
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[input_class: CARD8
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event_type_base: CARD8]
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Errors: Device
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This request returns the event classes to be used by the client
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to indicate which events the client program wishes to receive.
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Each input class may report several event classes. For example,
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input class Keys reports DeviceKeyPress and DeviceKeyRelease
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event classes. Input classes are unique numbers registered with
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the X Consortium. Input class Other exists to report event
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classes that are not specific to any one input class, such as
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DeviceMappingNotify, ChangeDeviceNotify, and DeviceStateNotify.
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The information returned for each device is as follows:
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device_id
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The device_id is a number that uniquely identifies the
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device.
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num_classes
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The num_classes field contains the number of input
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classes supported by this device.
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For each class of input supported by the device, the
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InputClassInfo structure contains the following information:
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input_class
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The input_class is a small cardinal number that
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identifies the class of input.
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event_type_base
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The event_type_base is a small cardinal number that
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specifies the event type of one of the events reported
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by this input class. This information is not directly
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used by client programs. Instead, the Device is used by
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macros that return extension event types and event
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classes. This is described in the section of this
|
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document entitled "Selecting Extension Device Events".
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The information in the InputClassInfo reflects the state of
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this device at the time the request was processed.
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Before it exits, the client program should explicitly request
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that the server close the device. This is done via the
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CloseDevice request.
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|
|
A client may open the same extension device more than once.
|
|
Requests after the first successful one return an additional
|
|
XDevice structure with the same information as the first, but
|
|
otherwise have no effect. A single CloseDevice request will
|
|
terminate that client's access to the device.
|
|
|
|
Closing a device releases any active or passive grabs the
|
|
requesting client has established. If the device is frozen only
|
|
by an active grab of the requesting client, the queued events
|
|
are released when the client terminates.
|
|
|
|
If a client program terminates without closing a device, the
|
|
server will automatically close that device on behalf of the
|
|
client. This does not affect any other clients that may be
|
|
accessing that device.
|
|
|
|
CloseDevice:
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device
|
|
|
|
2.4 Changing The Mode Of A Device
|
|
|
|
Some devices are capable of reporting either relative or
|
|
absolute motion data. To change the mode of a device from
|
|
relative to absolute, use the SetDeviceMode request. The valid
|
|
values are Absolute or Relative.
|
|
|
|
This request will fail and return DeviceBusy if another client
|
|
already has the device open with a different mode. It will fail
|
|
and return AlreadyGrabbed if another client has the device
|
|
grabbed. The request will fail with a BadMatch error if the
|
|
device has no valuators and reports no axes of motion. The
|
|
request will fail with a BadMode error if the requested mode
|
|
is not supported by the device.
|
|
|
|
SetDeviceMode
|
|
device:DEVICE
|
|
mode: {Absolute, Relative}
|
|
=>
|
|
status: {Success, DeviceBusy, AlreadyGrabbed}
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match, Mode
|
|
|
|
2.5 Initializing Valuators on an Input Device
|
|
|
|
Some devices that report absolute positional data can be
|
|
initialized to a starting value. Devices that are capable of
|
|
reporting relative motion or absolute positional data may
|
|
require that their valuators be initialized to a starting value
|
|
after the mode of the device is changed to Absolute. To
|
|
initialize the valuators on such a device, use the
|
|
SetDeviceValuators request.
|
|
|
|
SetDeviceValuators
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
first_valuator: CARD8
|
|
num_valuators: CARD8
|
|
valuators: LISTOFINT32
|
|
=>
|
|
status: {Success, AlreadyGrabbed}
|
|
|
|
Errors: Length, Device, Match, Value
|
|
|
|
This request initializes the specified valuators on the
|
|
specified extension input device. Valuators are numbered
|
|
beginning with zero. Only the valuators in the range specified
|
|
by first_valuator and num_valuators are set. If the number of
|
|
valuators supported by the device is less than the expression
|
|
first_valuator + num_valuators, a Value error will result.
|
|
|
|
If the request succeeds, Success is returned. If the specifed
|
|
device is grabbed by some other client, the request will fail
|
|
and a status of AlreadyGrabbed will be returned.
|
|
|
|
2.6 Getting Input Device Controls
|
|
|
|
GetDeviceControl
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
control: XID
|
|
=>
|
|
controlState: {DeviceState}
|
|
|
|
where
|
|
|
|
DeviceState: DeviceResolutionState
|
|
|
|
Errors: Length, Device, Match, Value
|
|
|
|
This request returns the current state of the specified device
|
|
control. The device control must be supported by the target
|
|
server and device or an error will result.
|
|
|
|
If the request is successful, a pointer to a generic
|
|
DeviceState structure will be returned. The information
|
|
returned varies according to the specified control and is
|
|
mapped by a structure appropriate for that control.
|
|
|
|
GetDeviceControl will fail with a BadValue error if the server
|
|
does not support the specified control. It will fail with a
|
|
BadMatch error if the device does not support the specified
|
|
control.
|
|
|
|
Supported device controls and the information returned for them
|
|
include:
|
|
|
|
DEVICE_RESOLUTION:
|
|
[control: CARD16
|
|
length: CARD16
|
|
num_valuators: CARD8
|
|
resolutions: LISTofCARD32
|
|
min_resolutions: LISTofCARD32
|
|
max_resolutions: LISTofCARD32]
|
|
|
|
This device control returns a list of valuators and the range
|
|
of valid resolutions allowed for each. Valuators are numbered
|
|
beginning with 0. Resolutions for all valuators on the device
|
|
are returned. For each valuator i on the device, resolutions[i]
|
|
returns the current setting of the resolution,
|
|
min_resolutions[i] returns the minimum valid setting, and
|
|
max_resolutions[i] returns the maximum valid setting.
|
|
|
|
When this control is specified, XGetDeviceControl will fail
|
|
with a BadMatch error if the specified device has no valuators.
|
|
|
|
ChangeDeviceControl:
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
XID: controlId
|
|
control: DeviceControl
|
|
|
|
where
|
|
|
|
DeviceControl: DeviceResolutionControl
|
|
=>
|
|
status: {Success, DeviceBusy, AlreadyGrabbed}
|
|
|
|
Errors: Length, Device, Match, Value
|
|
|
|
ChangeDeviceControl changes the specifed device control
|
|
according to the values specified in the DeviceControl
|
|
structure. The device control must be supported by the target
|
|
server and device or an error will result.
|
|
|
|
The information passed with this request varies according to
|
|
the specified control and is mapped by a structure appropriate
|
|
for that control.
|
|
|
|
ChangeDeviceControl will fail with a BadValue error if the
|
|
server does not support the specified control. It will fail
|
|
with a BadMatch error if the server supports the specified
|
|
control, but the requested device does not. The request will
|
|
fail and return a status of DeviceBusy if another client
|
|
already has the device open with a device control state that
|
|
conflicts with the one specified in the request. It will fail
|
|
with a status of AlreadyGrabbed if some other client has
|
|
grabbed the specified device. If the request succeeds, Success
|
|
is returned. If it fails, the device control is left unchanged.
|
|
|
|
Supported device controls and the information specified for
|
|
them include:
|
|
|
|
DEVICE_RESOLUTION:
|
|
[control: CARD16
|
|
length: CARD16
|
|
first_valuator: CARD8
|
|
num_valuators: CARD8
|
|
resolutions: LISTofCARD32]
|
|
|
|
This device control changes the resolution of the specified
|
|
valuators on the specified extension input device. Valuators
|
|
are numbered beginning with zero. Only the valuators in the
|
|
range specified by first_valuator and num_valuators are set. A
|
|
value of -1 in the resolutions list indicates that the
|
|
resolution for this valuator is not to be changed.
|
|
num_valuators specifies the number of valuators in the
|
|
resolutions list.
|
|
|
|
When this control is specified, XChangeDeviceControl will fail
|
|
with a BadMatch error if the specified device has no valuators.
|
|
If a resolution is specified that is not within the range of
|
|
valid values (as returned by XGetDeviceControl) the request
|
|
will fail with a BadValue error. If the number of valuators
|
|
supported by the device is less than the expression
|
|
first_valuator + num_valuators, a BadValue error will result.
|
|
|
|
If the request fails for any reason, none of the valuator
|
|
resolutions will be changed.
|
|
|
|
ChangeDeviceControl causes the server to send a DevicePresence
|
|
event to interested clients.
|
|
|
|
2.7 Selecting Extension Device Events
|
|
|
|
Extension input events are selected using the
|
|
SelectExtensionEvent request.
|
|
|
|
SelectExtensionEvent
|
|
interest: LISTofEVENTCLASS
|
|
window: WINDOW
|
|
|
|
Errors: Window, Class, Access
|
|
|
|
This request specifies to the server the events within the
|
|
specified window which are of interest to the client. As with
|
|
the core XSelectInput function, multiple clients can select
|
|
input on the same window.
|
|
|
|
XSelectExtensionEvent requires a list of event classes. An
|
|
event class is a 32-bit number that combines an event type and
|
|
device id, and is used to indicate which event a client wishes
|
|
to receive and from which device it wishes to receive it.
|
|
Macros are provided to obtain event classes from the data
|
|
returned by the XOpenDevice request. The names of these macros
|
|
correspond to the desired events, i.e. the DeviceKeyPress is
|
|
used to obtain the event class for DeviceKeyPress events. The
|
|
syntax of the macro invocation is:
|
|
DeviceKeyPress (device, event_type, event_class);
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
event_type: INT
|
|
event_class: INT
|
|
|
|
The value returned in event_type is the value that will be
|
|
contained in the event type field of the XDeviceKeyPressEvent
|
|
when it is received by the client. The value returned in
|
|
event_class is the value that should be passed in making an
|
|
XSelectExtensionEvent request to receive DeviceKeyPress events.
|
|
|
|
For DeviceButtonPress events, the client may specify whether or
|
|
not an implicit passive grab should be done when the button is
|
|
pressed. If the client wants to guarantee that it will receive
|
|
a DeviceButtonRelease event for each DeviceButtonPress event it
|
|
receives, it should specify the DeviceButtonPressGrab event
|
|
class as well as the DeviceButtonPress event class. This
|
|
restricts the client in that only one client at a time may
|
|
request DeviceButtonPress events from the same device and
|
|
window if any client specifies this class.
|
|
|
|
If any client has specified the DeviceButtonPressGrab class,
|
|
any requests by any other client that specify the same device
|
|
and window and specify DeviceButtonPress or
|
|
DeviceButtonPressGrab will cause an Access error to be
|
|
generated.
|
|
|
|
If only the DeviceButtonPress class is specified, no implicit
|
|
passive grab will be done when a button is pressed on the
|
|
device. Multiple clients may use this class to specify the same
|
|
device and window combination.
|
|
|
|
A client may also specify the DeviceOwnerGrabButton class. If
|
|
it has specified both the DeviceButtonPressGrab and the
|
|
DeviceOwnerGrabButton classes, implicit passive grabs will
|
|
activate with owner_events set to True. If only the
|
|
DeviceButtonPressGrab class is specified, implicit passive
|
|
grabs will activate with owner_events set to False.
|
|
|
|
The client may select DeviceMotion events only when a button is
|
|
down. It does this by specifying the event classes
|
|
Button1Motion through Button5Motion, or ButtonMotion. An input
|
|
device will only support as many button motion classes as it
|
|
has buttons.
|
|
|
|
2.8 Determining Selected Events
|
|
|
|
To determine which extension events are currently selected from
|
|
a given window, use GetSelectedExtensionEvents.
|
|
|
|
GetSelectedExtensionEvents
|
|
window: WINDOW
|
|
=>
|
|
this-client: LISTofEVENTCLASS
|
|
all-clients: LISTofEVENTCLASS
|
|
|
|
Errors: Window
|
|
|
|
This request returns two lists specifying the events selected
|
|
on the specified window. One list gives the extension events
|
|
selected by this client from the specified window. The other
|
|
list gives the extension events selected by all clients from
|
|
the specified window. This information is equivalent to that
|
|
returned by your-event-mask and all-event-masks in a
|
|
GetWindowAttributes request.
|
|
|
|
2.9 Controlling Event Propagation
|
|
|
|
Extension events propagate up the window hierarchy in the same
|
|
manner as core events. If a window is not interested in an
|
|
extension event, it usually propagates to the closest ancestor
|
|
that is interested, unless the dont_propagate list prohibits
|
|
it. Grabs of extension devices may alter the set of windows
|
|
that receive a particular extension event.
|
|
|
|
Client programs may control extension event propagation through
|
|
the use of the following two requests.
|
|
|
|
XChangeDeviceDontPropagateList adds an event to or deletes an
|
|
event from the do_not_propagate list of extension events for
|
|
the specified window. This list is maintained for the life of
|
|
the window, and is not altered if the client terminates.
|
|
|
|
ChangeDeviceDontPropagateList
|
|
window: WINDOW
|
|
eventclass: LISTofEVENTCLASS
|
|
mode: {AddToList, DeleteFromList}
|
|
|
|
Errors: Window, Class, Mode
|
|
|
|
This function modifies the list specifying the events that are
|
|
not propagated to the ancestors of the specified window. You
|
|
may use the modes AddToList or DeleteFromList.
|
|
|
|
GetDeviceDontPropagateList
|
|
window: WINDOW
|
|
Errors: Window
|
|
=>
|
|
dont-propagate-list: LISTofEVENTCLASS
|
|
|
|
This function returns a list specifying the events that are not
|
|
propagated to the ancestors of the specified window.
|
|
|
|
2.10 Sending Extension Events
|
|
|
|
One client program may send an event to another via the
|
|
XSendExtensionEvent function.
|
|
|
|
The event in the XEvent structure must be one of the events
|
|
defined by the input extension, so that the X server can
|
|
correctly byte swap the contents as necessary. The contents of
|
|
the event are otherwise unaltered and unchecked by the X server
|
|
except to force send_event to True in the forwarded event and
|
|
to set the sequence number in the event correctly.
|
|
|
|
XSendExtensionEvent returns zero if the conversion-to-wire
|
|
protocol failed, otherwise it returns nonzero.
|
|
|
|
SendExtensionEvent
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
destination: WINDOW
|
|
propagate: BOOL
|
|
eventclass: LISTofEVENTCLASS
|
|
event: XEVENT
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Value, Class, Window
|
|
|
|
2.11 Getting Motion History
|
|
|
|
GetDeviceMotionEvents
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
start, stop: TIMESTAMP or CurrentTime
|
|
=>
|
|
nevents_return: CARD32
|
|
mode_return: {Absolute, Relative}
|
|
axis_count_return: CARD8
|
|
events: LISTofDEVICETIMECOORD
|
|
|
|
where
|
|
|
|
DEVICETIMECOORD:
|
|
[data: LISTofINT32
|
|
time: TIMESTAMP]
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match
|
|
|
|
This request returns all positions in the device's motion
|
|
history buffer that fall between the specified start and stop
|
|
times inclusive. If the start time is in the future, or is
|
|
later than the stop time, no positions are returned.
|
|
|
|
The data field of the DEVICETIMECOORD structure is a sequence
|
|
of data items. Each item is of type INT32, and there is one
|
|
data item per axis of motion reported by the device. The number
|
|
of axes reported by the device is returned in the axis_count
|
|
variable.
|
|
|
|
The value of the data items depends on the mode of the device,
|
|
which is returned in the mode variable. If the mode is
|
|
Absolute, the data items are the raw values generated by the
|
|
device. These may be scaled by the client program using the
|
|
maximum values that the device can generate for each axis of
|
|
motion that it reports. The maximum and minimum values for each
|
|
axis are reported by the ListInputDevices request.
|
|
|
|
If the mode is Relative, the data items are the relative values
|
|
generated by the device. The client program must choose an
|
|
initial position for the device and maintain a current position
|
|
by accumulating these relative values.
|
|
|
|
2.12 Changing The Core Devices
|
|
|
|
These requests are provided to change which physical device is
|
|
used as the X pointer or X keyboard. These requests are
|
|
deprecated in servers supporting XI 1.4 and above, and will
|
|
always return a a BadDevice error.
|
|
|
|
Using these requests may change the characteristics of the core
|
|
devices. The new pointer device may have a different number of
|
|
buttons than the old one did, or the new keyboard device may
|
|
have a different number of keys or report a different range of
|
|
keycodes. Client programs may be running that depend on those
|
|
characteristics. For example, a client program could allocate
|
|
an array based on the number of buttons on the pointer device,
|
|
and then use the button numbers received in button events as
|
|
indicies into that array. Changing the core devices could cause
|
|
such client programs to behave improperly or abnormally
|
|
terminate.
|
|
|
|
These requests change the X keyboard or X pointer device and
|
|
generate an ChangeDeviceNotify event and a MappingNotify event.
|
|
The ChangeDeviceNotify event is sent only to those clients that
|
|
have expressed an interest in receiving that event via the
|
|
XSelectExtensionEvent request. The specified device becomes the
|
|
new X keyboard or X pointer device. The location of the core
|
|
device does not change as a result of this request.
|
|
|
|
These requests fail and return AlreadyGrabbed if either the
|
|
specified device or the core device it would replace are
|
|
grabbed by some other client. They fail and return GrabFrozen
|
|
if either device is frozen by the active grab of another
|
|
client.
|
|
|
|
These requests fail with a BadDevice error if the specified
|
|
device is invalid, or has not previously been opened via
|
|
OpenDevice. To change the X keyboard device, use the
|
|
ChangeKeyboardDevice request. The specified device must support
|
|
input class Keys (as reported in the ListInputDevices request)
|
|
or the request will fail with a BadMatch error. Once the device
|
|
has successfully replaced one of the core devices, it is
|
|
treated as a core device until it is in turn replaced by
|
|
another ChangeDevice request, or until the server terminates.
|
|
The termination of the client that changed the device will not
|
|
cause it to change back. Attempts to use the CloseDevice
|
|
request to close the new core device will fail with a BadDevice
|
|
error.
|
|
|
|
The focus state of the new keyboard is the same as the focus
|
|
state of the old X keyboard. If the new keyboard was not
|
|
initialized with a FocusRec, one is added by the
|
|
ChangeKeyboardDevice request. The X keyboard is assumed to have
|
|
a KbdFeedbackClassRec. If the device was initialized without a
|
|
KbdFeedbackClassRec, one will be added by this request. The
|
|
KbdFeedbackClassRec will specify a null routine as the control
|
|
procedure and the bell procedure.
|
|
|
|
ChangeKeyboardDevice
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
Errors: Device, Match
|
|
=>
|
|
status: Success, AlreadyGrabbed, Frozen
|
|
|
|
To change the X pointer device, use the ChangePointerDevice
|
|
request. The specified device must support input class
|
|
Valuators (as reported in the ListInputDevices request) or the
|
|
request will fail with a BadMatch error. The valuators to be
|
|
used as the x- and y-axes of the pointer device must be
|
|
specified. Data from other valuators on the device will be
|
|
ignored.
|
|
|
|
The X pointer device does not contain a FocusRec. If the new
|
|
pointer was initialized with a FocusRec, it is freed by the
|
|
ChangePointerDevice request. The X pointer is assumed to have a
|
|
ButtonClassRec and a PtrFeedbackClassRec. If the device was
|
|
initialized without a ButtonClassRec or a PtrFeedbackClassRec,
|
|
one will be added by this request. The ButtonClassRec added
|
|
will have no buttons, and the PtrFeedbackClassRec will specify
|
|
a null routine as the control procedure.
|
|
|
|
If the specified device reports absolute positional
|
|
information, and the server implementation does not allow such
|
|
a device to be used as the X pointer, the request will fail
|
|
with a BadDevice error.
|
|
|
|
Once the device has successfully replaced one of the core
|
|
devices, it is treated as a core device until it is in turn
|
|
replaced by another ChangeDevice request, or until the server
|
|
terminates. The termination of the client that changed the
|
|
device will not cause it to change back. Attempts to use the
|
|
CloseDevice request to close the new core device will fail with
|
|
a BadDevice error.
|
|
|
|
ChangePointerDevice
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
xaxis: CARD8
|
|
yaxis: CARD8
|
|
=>
|
|
status: Success, AlreadyGrabbed, Frozen
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match
|
|
|
|
2.12 Event Synchronization And Core Grabs
|
|
|
|
Implementation of the input extension requires an extension of
|
|
the meaning of event synchronization for the core grab
|
|
requests. This is necessary in order to allow window managers
|
|
to freeze all input devices with a single request.
|
|
|
|
The core grab requests require a pointer_mode and keyboard_mode
|
|
argument. The meaning of these modes is changed by the input
|
|
extension. For the XGrabPointer and XGrabButton requests,
|
|
pointer_mode controls synchronization of the pointer device,
|
|
and keyboard_mode controls the synchronization of all other
|
|
input devices. For the XGrabKeyboard and XGrabKey requests,
|
|
pointer_mode controls the synchronization of all input devices
|
|
except the X keyboard, while keyboard_mode controls the
|
|
synchronization of the keyboard. When using one of the core
|
|
grab requests, the synchronization of extension devices is
|
|
controlled by the mode specified for the device not being
|
|
grabbed.
|
|
|
|
2.13 Extension Active Grabs
|
|
|
|
Active grabs of extension devices are supported via the
|
|
GrabDevice request in the same way that core devices are
|
|
grabbed using the core GrabKeyboard request, except that a
|
|
Device is passed as a function parameter. A list of events that
|
|
the client wishes to receive is also passed. The UngrabDevice
|
|
request allows a previous active grab for an extension device
|
|
to be released.
|
|
|
|
To grab an extension device, use the GrabDevice request. The
|
|
device must have previously been opened using the OpenDevice
|
|
request.
|
|
|
|
GrabDevice
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
grab-window: WINDOW
|
|
owner-events: BOOL
|
|
event-list: LISTofEVENTCLASS
|
|
this-device-mode: {Synchronous, Asynchronous}
|
|
other-device-mode: {Synchronous, Asynchronous}
|
|
time:TIMESTAMP or CurrentTime
|
|
=>
|
|
status: Success, AlreadyGrabbed, Frozen,
|
|
InvalidTime, NotViewable
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Window, Value
|
|
|
|
This request actively grabs control of the specified input
|
|
device. Further input events from this device are reported only
|
|
to the grabbing client. This request overrides any previous
|
|
active grab by this client for this device.
|
|
|
|
The event-list parameter is a pointer to a list of event
|
|
classes. These are used to indicate which events the client
|
|
wishes to receive while the device is grabbed. Only event
|
|
classes obtained from the grabbed device are valid.
|
|
|
|
If owner-events is False, input events generated from this
|
|
device are reported with respect to grab-window, and are only
|
|
reported if selected by being included in the event-list. If
|
|
owner-events is True, then if a generated event would normally
|
|
be reported to this client, it is reported normally, otherwise
|
|
the event is reported with respect to the grab-window, and is
|
|
only reported if selected by being included in the event-list.
|
|
For either value of owner-events, unreported events are
|
|
discarded.
|
|
|
|
If this-device-mode is Asynchronous, device event processing
|
|
continues normally. If the device is currently frozen by this
|
|
client, then processing of device events is resumed. If
|
|
this-device-mode is Synchronous, the state of the grabbed
|
|
device (as seen by means of the protocol) appears to freeze,
|
|
and no further device events are generated by the server until
|
|
the grabbing client issues a releasing AllowDeviceEvents
|
|
request or until the device grab is released. Actual device
|
|
input events are not lost while the device is frozen; they are
|
|
simply queued for later processing.
|
|
|
|
If other-device-mode is Asynchronous, event processing is
|
|
unaffected by activation of the grab. If other-device-mode is
|
|
Synchronous, the state of all input devices except the grabbed
|
|
one (as seen by means of the protocol) appears to freeze, and
|
|
no further events are generated by the server until the
|
|
grabbing client issues a releasing AllowDeviceEvents request or
|
|
until the device grab is released. Actual events are not lost
|
|
while the devices are frozen; they are simply queued for later
|
|
processing.
|
|
|
|
This request generates DeviceFocusIn and DeviceFocusOut events.
|
|
|
|
This request fails and returns:
|
|
|
|
AlreadyGrabbed
|
|
If the device is actively grabbed by some other client.
|
|
|
|
NotViewable
|
|
If grab-window is not viewable.
|
|
|
|
InvalidTime
|
|
If the specified time is earlier than the last-grab-time
|
|
for the specified device or later than the current X
|
|
server time. Otherwise, the last-grab-time for the
|
|
specified device is set to the specified time and
|
|
CurrentTime is replaced by the current X server time.
|
|
|
|
Frozen
|
|
If the device is frozen by an active grab of another
|
|
client.
|
|
|
|
If a grabbed device is closed by a client while an active grab
|
|
by that client is in effect, that active grab will be released.
|
|
Any passive grabs established by that client will be released.
|
|
If the device is frozen only by an active grab of the
|
|
requesting client, it is thawed.
|
|
|
|
To release a grab of an extension device, use UngrabDevice.
|
|
|
|
UngrabDevice
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
time: TIMESTAMP or CurrentTime
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device
|
|
|
|
This request releases the device if this client has it actively
|
|
grabbed (from either GrabDevice or GrabDeviceKey) and releases
|
|
any queued events. If any devices were frozen by the grab,
|
|
UngrabDevice thaws them. The request has no effect if the
|
|
specified time is earlier than the last-device-grab time or is
|
|
later than the current server time.
|
|
|
|
This request generates DeviceFocusIn and DeviceFocusOut events.
|
|
|
|
An UngrabDevice is performed automatically if the event window
|
|
for an active device grab becomes not viewable.
|
|
|
|
2.14 Passively Grabbing A Key
|
|
|
|
Passive grabs of buttons and keys on extension devices are
|
|
supported via the GrabDeviceButton and GrabDeviceKey requests.
|
|
These passive grabs are released via the UngrabDeviceKey and
|
|
UngrabDeviceButton requests.
|
|
|
|
To passively grab a single key on an extension device, use
|
|
GrabDeviceKey. That device must have previously been opened
|
|
using the OpenDevice request.
|
|
|
|
GrabDeviceKey
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
keycode: KEYCODE or AnyKey
|
|
modifiers: SETofKEYMASK or AnyModifier
|
|
modifier-device: DEVICE or NULL
|
|
grab-window: WINDOW
|
|
owner-events: BOOL
|
|
event-list: LISTofEVENTCLASS
|
|
this-device-mode: {Synchronous, Asynchronous}
|
|
other-device-mode: {Synchronous, Asynchronous}
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match, Access, Window, Value
|
|
|
|
This request is analogous to the core GrabKey request. It
|
|
establishes a passive grab on a device. Consequently, in the
|
|
future:
|
|
* IF the device is not grabbed and the specified key, which
|
|
itself can be a modifier key, is logically pressed when the
|
|
specified modifier keys logically are down on the specified
|
|
modifier device (and no other keys are down),
|
|
* AND no other modifier keys logically are down,
|
|
* AND EITHER the grab window is an ancestor of (or is) the
|
|
focus window OR the grab window is a descendent of the
|
|
focus window and contains the pointer,
|
|
* AND a passive grab on the same device and key combination
|
|
does not exist on any ancestor of the grab window,
|
|
* THEN the device is actively grabbed, as for GrabDevice, the
|
|
last-device-grab time is set to the time at which the key
|
|
was pressed (as transmitted in the DeviceKeyPress event),
|
|
and the DeviceKeyPress event is reported.
|
|
|
|
The interpretation of the remaining arguments is as for
|
|
GrabDevice. The active grab is terminated automatically when
|
|
logical state of the device has the specified key released
|
|
(independent of the logical state of the modifier keys).
|
|
|
|
Note that the logical state of a device (as seen by means of
|
|
the X protocol) may lag the physical state if device event
|
|
processing is frozen.
|
|
|
|
A modifier of AnyModifier is equivalent to issuing the request
|
|
for all possible modifier combinations (including the
|
|
combination of no modifiers). It is not required that all
|
|
modifiers specified have currently assigned keycodes. A key of
|
|
AnyKey is equivalent to issuing the request for all possible
|
|
keycodes. Otherwise, the key must be in the range specified by
|
|
min-keycode and max-keycode in the ListInputDevices request. If
|
|
it is not within that range, GrabDeviceKey generates a Value
|
|
error.
|
|
|
|
NULL may be passed for the modifier_device. If the
|
|
modifier_device is NULL, the core X keyboard is used as the
|
|
modifier_device.
|
|
|
|
An Access error is generated if some other client has issued a
|
|
GrabDeviceKey with the same device and key combination on the
|
|
same window. When using AnyModifier or AnyKey, the request
|
|
fails completely and the X server generates a Access error and
|
|
no grabs are established if there is a conflicting grab for any
|
|
combination.
|
|
|
|
This request cannot be used to grab a key on the X keyboard
|
|
device. The core GrabKey request should be used for that
|
|
purpose.
|
|
|
|
To release a passive grab of a single key on an extension
|
|
device, use UngrabDeviceKey.
|
|
|
|
UngrabDeviceKey
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
keycode: KEYCODE or AnyKey
|
|
modifiers: SETofKEYMASK or AnyModifier
|
|
modifier-device: DEVICE or NULL
|
|
grab-window: WINDOW
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match, Window, Value, Alloc
|
|
|
|
This request is analogous to the core UngrabKey request. It
|
|
releases the key combination on the specified window if it was
|
|
grabbed by this client. A modifier of AnyModifier is equivalent
|
|
to issuing the request for all possible modifier combinations
|
|
(including the combination of no modifiers). A key of AnyKey is
|
|
equivalent to issuing the request for all possible keycodes.
|
|
This request has no effect on an active grab.
|
|
|
|
NULL may be passed for the modifier_device. If the
|
|
modifier_device is NULL, the core X keyboard is used as the
|
|
modifier_device.
|
|
|
|
2.15 Passively Grabbing A Button
|
|
|
|
To establish a passive grab for a single button on an extension
|
|
device, use GrabDeviceButton.
|
|
|
|
GrabDeviceButton
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
button: BUTTON or AnyButton
|
|
modifiers: SETofKEYMASK or AnyModifier
|
|
modifier-device: DEVICE or NULL
|
|
grab-window: WINDOW
|
|
owner-events: BOOL
|
|
event-list: LISTofEVENTCLASS
|
|
this-device-mode: {Synchronous, Asynchr
|
|
onous}
|
|
other-device-mode: {Synchronous, Asynch
|
|
ronous}
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match, Window, Access, Value
|
|
|
|
This request is analogous to the core GrabButton request. It
|
|
establishes an explicit passive grab for a button on an
|
|
extension input device. Since the server does not track
|
|
extension devices, no cursor is specified with this request.
|
|
For the same reason, there is no confine-to parameter. The
|
|
device must have previously been opened using the OpenDevice
|
|
request.
|
|
|
|
The GrabDeviceButton request establishes a passive grab on a
|
|
device. Consequently, in the future,
|
|
|
|
•
|
|
IF the device is not grabbed and the specified button is
|
|
logically pressed when the specified modifier keys
|
|
logically are down (and no other buttons or modifier
|
|
keys are down),
|
|
|
|
•
|
|
AND the grab window contains the device,
|
|
|
|
•
|
|
AND a passive grab on the same device and button/ key
|
|
combination does not exist on any ancestor of the grab
|
|
window,
|
|
|
|
•
|
|
THEN the device is actively grabbed, as for GrabDevice,
|
|
the last-grab time is set to the time at which the
|
|
button was pressed (as transmitted in the
|
|
DeviceButtonPress event), and the DeviceButtonPress
|
|
event is reported.
|
|
|
|
The interpretation of the remaining arguments is as for
|
|
GrabDevice. The active grab is terminated automatically when
|
|
logical state of the device has all buttons released
|
|
(independent of the logical state of the modifier keys).
|
|
|
|
Note that the logical state of a device (as seen by means of
|
|
the X protocol) may lag the physical state if device event
|
|
processing is frozen.
|
|
|
|
A modifier of AnyModifier is equivalent to issuing the request
|
|
for all possible modifier combinations (including the
|
|
combination of no modifiers). It is not required that all
|
|
modifiers specified have currently assigned keycodes. A button
|
|
of AnyButton is equivalent to issuing the request for all
|
|
possible buttons. It is not required that the specified button
|
|
be assigned to a physical button.
|
|
|
|
NULL may be passed for the modifier_device. If the
|
|
modifier_device is NULL, the core X keyboard is used as the
|
|
modifier_device.
|
|
|
|
An Access error is generated if some other client has issued a
|
|
GrabDeviceButton with the same device and button combination on
|
|
the same window. When using AnyModifier or AnyButton, the
|
|
request fails completely and the X server generates a Access
|
|
error and no grabs are established if there is a conflicting
|
|
grab for any combination. The request has no effect on an
|
|
active grab.
|
|
|
|
This request cannot be used to grab a button on the X pointer
|
|
device. The core GrabButton request should be used for that
|
|
purpose.
|
|
|
|
To release a passive grab of a button on an extension device,
|
|
use UngrabDeviceButton.
|
|
|
|
UngrabDeviceButton
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
button: BUTTON or AnyButton
|
|
modifiers: SETofKEYMASK or AnyModifier
|
|
modifier-device: DEVICE or NULL
|
|
grab-window: WINDOW
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match, Window, Value, Alloc
|
|
|
|
This request is analogous to the core UngrabButton request. It
|
|
releases the passive button/key combination on the specified
|
|
window if it was grabbed by the client. A modifiers of
|
|
AnyModifier is equivalent to issuing the request for all
|
|
possible modifier combinations (including the combination of no
|
|
modifiers). A button of AnyButton is equivalent to issuing the
|
|
request for all possible buttons. This request has no effect on
|
|
an active grab. The device must have previously been opened
|
|
using the OpenDevice request otherwise a Device error will be
|
|
generated.
|
|
|
|
NULL may be passed for the modifier_device. If the
|
|
modifier_device is NULL, the core X keyboard is used as the
|
|
modifier_device.
|
|
|
|
This request cannot be used to ungrab a button on the X pointer
|
|
device. The core UngrabButton request should be used for that
|
|
purpose.
|
|
|
|
2.16 Thawing A Device
|
|
|
|
To allow further events to be processed when a device has been
|
|
frozen, use AllowDeviceEvents.
|
|
|
|
AllowDeviceEvents
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
event-mode: {AsyncThisDevice, SyncThisD
|
|
evice, AsyncOtherDevices,
|
|
ReplayThisdevice, AsyncAll, or SyncAll}
|
|
time:TIMESTAMP or CurrentTime
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Value
|
|
|
|
The AllowDeviceEvents request releases some queued events if
|
|
the client has caused a device to freeze. The request has no
|
|
effect if the specified time is earlier than the last-grab time
|
|
of the most recent active grab for the client, or if the
|
|
specified time is later than the current X server time.
|
|
|
|
The following describes the processing that occurs depending on
|
|
what constant you pass to the event-mode argument:
|
|
|
|
* If the specified device is frozen by the client, event
|
|
processing for that device continues as usual. If the
|
|
device is frozen multiple times by the client on behalf
|
|
of multiple separate grabs, AsyncThisDevice thaws for
|
|
all. AsyncThisDevice has no effect if the specified
|
|
device is not frozen by the client, but the device need
|
|
not be grabbed by the client.
|
|
|
|
* If the specified device is frozen and actively grabbed
|
|
by the client, event processing for that device
|
|
continues normally until the next button or key event is
|
|
reported to the client. At this time, the specified
|
|
device again appears to freeze. However, if the reported
|
|
event causes the grab to be released, the specified
|
|
device does not freeze. SyncThisDevice has no effect if
|
|
the specified device is not frozen by the client or is
|
|
not grabbed by the client.
|
|
|
|
* If the specified device is actively grabbed by the
|
|
client and is frozen as the result of an event having
|
|
been sent to the client (either from the activation of a
|
|
GrabDeviceButton or from a previous AllowDeviceEvents
|
|
with mode SyncThisDevice, but not from a Grab), the grab
|
|
is released and that event is completely reprocessed.
|
|
This time, however, the request ignores any passive
|
|
grabs at or above (towards the root) the grab-window of
|
|
the grab just released. The request has no effect if the
|
|
specified device is not grabbed by the client or if it
|
|
is not frozen as the result of an event.
|
|
|
|
* If the remaining devices are frozen by the client, event
|
|
processing for them continues as usual. If the other
|
|
devices are frozen multiple times by the client on
|
|
behalf of multiple separate grabs, AsyncOtherDevices
|
|
“thaws” for all. AsyncOtherDevices has no effect if the
|
|
devices are not frozen by the client, but those devices
|
|
need not be grabbed by the client.
|
|
|
|
* If all devices are frozen by the client, event
|
|
processing (for all devices) continues normally until
|
|
the next button or key event is reported to the client
|
|
for a grabbed device (button event for the grabbed
|
|
device, key or motion event for the device), at which
|
|
time the devices again appear to freeze. However, if the
|
|
reported event causes the grab to be released, then the
|
|
devices do not freeze (but if any device is still
|
|
grabbed, then a subsequent event for it will still cause
|
|
all devices to freeze). SyncAll has no effect unless all
|
|
devices are frozen by the client. If any device is
|
|
frozen twice by the client on behalf of two separate
|
|
grabs, SyncAll "thaws" for both (but a subsequent freeze
|
|
for SyncAll will only freeze each device once).
|
|
|
|
* If all devices are frozen by the client, event
|
|
processing (for all devices) continues normally. If any
|
|
device is frozen multiple times by the client on behalf
|
|
of multiple separate grabs, AsyncAll "thaws" for all.
|
|
AsyncAll has no effect unless all devices are frozen by
|
|
the client.
|
|
|
|
AsyncThisDevice, SyncThisDevice, and ReplayThisDevice
|
|
have no effect on the processing of events from the
|
|
remaining devices. AsyncOtherDevices has no effect on
|
|
the processing of events from the specified device. When
|
|
the event_mode is SyncAll or AsyncAll, the device
|
|
parameter is ignored.
|
|
|
|
It is possible for several grabs of different devices
|
|
(by the same or different clients) to be active
|
|
simultaneously. If a device is frozen on behalf of any
|
|
grab, no event processing is performed for the device.
|
|
It is possible for a single device to be frozen because
|
|
of several grabs. In this case, the freeze must be
|
|
released on behalf of each grab before events can again
|
|
be processed.
|
|
|
|
2.17 Controlling Device Focus
|
|
|
|
The current focus window for an extension input device can be
|
|
determined using the GetDeviceFocus request. Extension devices
|
|
are focused using the SetDeviceFocus request in the same way
|
|
that the keyboard is focused using the SetInputFocus request,
|
|
except that a device is specified as part of the request. One
|
|
additional focus state, FollowKeyboard, is provided for
|
|
extension devices.
|
|
|
|
To get the current focus state, revert state, and focus time of
|
|
an extension device, use GetDeviceFocus.
|
|
|
|
GetDeviceFocus
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
=>
|
|
focus: WINDOW, PointerRoot, FollowKeyboard, or None
|
|
revert-to: Parent, PointerRoot, FollowKeyboard, or None
|
|
focus-time: TIMESTAMP
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match
|
|
|
|
This request returns the current focus state, revert-to state,
|
|
and last-focus-time of an extension device.
|
|
|
|
To set the focus of an extension device, use SetDeviceFocus.
|
|
|
|
SetDeviceFocus
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
focus: WINDOW, PointerRoot, FollowKeyboard, or None
|
|
revert-to: Parent, PointerRoot, FollowKeyboard, or None
|
|
focus-time: TIMESTAMP
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Window, Value, Match
|
|
|
|
This request changes the focus for an extension input device
|
|
and the last-focus-change-time. The request has no effect if
|
|
the specified time is earlier than the last-focus-change-time
|
|
or is later than the current X server time. Otherwise, the
|
|
last-focus-change-time is set to the specified time, with
|
|
CurrentTime replaced by the current server time.
|
|
|
|
The action taken by the server when this request is requested
|
|
depends on the value of the focus argument:
|
|
|
|
* If the focus argument is None, all input events from
|
|
this device will be discarded until a new focus window
|
|
is set. In this case, the revert-to argument is ignored.
|
|
|
|
* If a window ID is assigned to the focus argument, it
|
|
becomes the focus window of the device. If an input
|
|
event from the device would normally be reported to this
|
|
window or to one of its inferiors, the event is reported
|
|
normally. Otherwise, the event is reported relative to
|
|
the focus window.
|
|
|
|
* If you assign PointerRoot to the focus argument, the
|
|
focus window is dynamically taken to be the root window
|
|
of whatever screen the pointer is on at each input
|
|
event. In this case, the revert-to argument is ignored.
|
|
|
|
* If you assign FollowKeyboard to the focus argument, the
|
|
focus window is dynamically taken to be the same as the
|
|
focus of the X keyboard at each input event.
|
|
|
|
The specified focus window must be viewable at the time
|
|
of the request (else a Match error). If the focus window
|
|
later becomes not viewable, the X server evaluates the
|
|
revert-to argument to determine the new focus window.
|
|
|
|
* If you assign RevertToParent to the revert-to argument,
|
|
the focus reverts to the parent (or the closest viewable
|
|
ancestor), and the new revert-to value is taken to be
|
|
RevertToNone.
|
|
|
|
* If you assign RevertToPointerRoot,
|
|
RevertToFollowKeyboard, or RevertToNone to the revert-to
|
|
argument, the focus reverts to that value.
|
|
|
|
When the focus reverts, the X server generates DeviceFocusIn
|
|
and DeviceFocusOut events, but the last-focus-change time is
|
|
not affected.
|
|
|
|
This request causes the X server to generate DeviceFocusIn and
|
|
DeviceFocusOut events.
|
|
|
|
2.18 Controlling Device Feedback
|
|
|
|
To get the settings of feedbacks on an extension device, use
|
|
GetFeedbackControl. This request provides functionality
|
|
equivalent to the core GetKeyboardControl and GetPointerControl
|
|
functions. It also provides a way to control displays
|
|
associated with an input device that are capable of displaying
|
|
an integer or string.
|
|
|
|
GetFeedbackControl
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
=>
|
|
num_feedbacks_return: CARD16
|
|
return_value: LISTofFEEDBACKSTATE
|
|
|
|
where
|
|
|
|
FEEDBACKSTATE: {KbdFeedbackState, PtrFeedbackState,
|
|
IntegerFeedbackState, StringFeedbackState,
|
|
BellFeedbackState, LedFeedbackState}
|
|
|
|
Feedbacks are reported by class. Those feedbacks that are
|
|
reported for the core keyboard device are in class KbdFeedback,
|
|
and are returned in the KbdFeedbackState structure. The members
|
|
of that structure are as follows:
|
|
|
|
CLASS Kbd:
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
length: CARD16
|
|
feedback id: CARD8
|
|
key_click_percent: CARD8
|
|
bell_percent: CARD8
|
|
bell_pitch: CARD16
|
|
bell_duration: CARD16
|
|
led_value: BITMASK
|
|
global_auto_repeat: {AutoRepeatModeOn, AutoRepeatModeOff}
|
|
auto_repeats: LISTofCARD8]
|
|
|
|
Those feedbacks that are equivalent to those reported for the
|
|
core pointer are in feedback class PtrFeedback and are reported
|
|
in the PtrFeedbackState structure. The members of that
|
|
structure are:
|
|
|
|
CLASS Ptr:
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
length: CARD16
|
|
feedback id: CARD8
|
|
accelNumerator: CARD16
|
|
accelDenominator: CARD16
|
|
threshold: CARD16]
|
|
|
|
Some input devices provide a means of displaying an integer.
|
|
Those devices will support feedback class IntegerFeedback,
|
|
which is reported in the IntegerFeedbackState structure. The
|
|
members of that structure are:
|
|
|
|
CLASS Integer:
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
length: CARD16
|
|
feedback id: CARD8
|
|
resolution: CARD32
|
|
min-val: INT32
|
|
max-val: INT32]
|
|
|
|
Some input devices provide a means of displaying a string.
|
|
Those devices will support feedback class StringFeedback, which
|
|
is reported in the StringFeedbackState structure. The members
|
|
of that structure are:
|
|
|
|
CLASS String:
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
length: CARD16
|
|
feedback id: CARD8
|
|
max_symbols: CARD16
|
|
num_keysyms_supported: CARD16
|
|
keysyms_supported: LISTofKEYSYM]
|
|
|
|
Some input devices contain a bell. Those devices will support
|
|
feedback class BellFeedback, which is reported in the
|
|
BellFeedbackState structure. The members of that structure are:
|
|
|
|
CLASS String:
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
length: CARD16
|
|
feedback id: CARD8
|
|
percent: CARD8
|
|
pitch: CARD16
|
|
duration: CARD16]
|
|
|
|
The percent sets the base volume for the bell between 0 (off)
|
|
and 100 (loud) inclusive, if possible. Setting to -1 restores
|
|
the default. Other negative values generate a Value error.
|
|
|
|
The pitch sets the pitch (specified in Hz) of the bell, if
|
|
possible. Setting to -1 restores the default. Other negative
|
|
values generate a Value error.
|
|
|
|
The duration sets the duration (specified in milliseconds) of
|
|
the bell, if possible. Setting to -1 restores the default.
|
|
Other negative values generate a Value error.
|
|
|
|
A bell generator connected with the console but not directly on
|
|
the device is treated as if it were part of the device. Some
|
|
input devices contain LEDs. Those devices will support feedback
|
|
class Led, which is reported in the LedFeedbackState structure.
|
|
The members of that structure are:
|
|
|
|
CLASS String:
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
length: CARD16
|
|
feedback id: CARD8
|
|
led_mask: BITMASK
|
|
led_value: BITMASK]
|
|
|
|
Each bit in led_mask indicates that the corresponding led is
|
|
supported by the feedback. At most 32 LEDs per feedback are
|
|
supported. No standard interpretation of LEDs is defined.
|
|
|
|
This function will fail with a BadMatch error if the device
|
|
specified in the request does not support feedbacks.
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match
|
|
|
|
To change the settings of a feedback on an extension device,
|
|
use ChangeFeedbackControl.
|
|
|
|
ChangeFeedbackControl
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
feedbackid: CARD8
|
|
value-mask: BITMASK
|
|
value: FEEDBACKCONTROL
|
|
FEEDBACKCONTROL: {KBDFEEDBACKCONTROL,
|
|
PTRFEEDBACKCONTROL,
|
|
INTEGERFEEDBACKCONTROL,
|
|
STRINGFEEDBACKCONTROL,
|
|
BELLFEEDBACKCONTROL,
|
|
LEDFEEDBACKCONTROL}
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match, Value
|
|
|
|
Feedback controls are grouped by class. Those feedbacks that
|
|
are equivalent to those supported by the core keyboard are
|
|
controlled by feedback class KbdFeedbackClass using the
|
|
KbdFeedbackControl structure. The members of that structure
|
|
are:
|
|
|
|
KBDFEEDBACKCTL
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
length: CARD16
|
|
feedback id: CARD8
|
|
key_click_percent: INT8
|
|
bell_percent: INT8
|
|
bell_pitch: INT16
|
|
bell_duration: INT16
|
|
led_mask: INT32
|
|
led_value: INT32
|
|
key: KEYCODE
|
|
auto_repeat_mode: {AutoRepeatModeOn, AutoRepeatModeOff,
|
|
AutoRepeatModeDefault}]
|
|
|
|
The key_click_percent sets the volume for key clicks between 0
|
|
(off) and 100 (loud) inclusive, if possible. Setting to -1
|
|
restores the default. Other negative values generate a Value
|
|
error.
|
|
|
|
If both auto_repeat_mode and key are specified, then the
|
|
auto_repeat_mode of that key is changed, if possible. If only
|
|
auto_repeat_mode is specified, then the global auto-repeat mode
|
|
for the entire keyboard is changed, if possible, without
|
|
affecting the per-key settings. It is a Match error if a key is
|
|
specified without an auto_repeat_mode.
|
|
|
|
The order in which controls are verified and altered is
|
|
server-dependent. If an error is generated, a subset of the
|
|
controls may have been altered.
|
|
|
|
Those feedback controls equivalent to those of the core pointer
|
|
are controlled by feedback class PtrFeedbackClass using the
|
|
PtrFeedbackControl structure. The members of that structure are
|
|
as follows:
|
|
|
|
PTRFEEDBACKCTL:
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
length: CARD16
|
|
feedback id: CARD8
|
|
accelNumerator: INT16
|
|
accelDenominator: INT16
|
|
threshold: INT16]
|
|
|
|
The acceleration, expressed as a fraction, is a multiplier for
|
|
movement. For example, specifying 3/1 means the device moves
|
|
three times as fast as normal. The fraction may be rounded
|
|
arbitrarily by the X server. Acceleration only takes effect if
|
|
the device moves more than threshold pixels at once and only
|
|
applies to the amount beyond the value in the threshold
|
|
argument. Setting a value to -1 restores the default. The
|
|
values of the do-accel and do-threshold arguments must be
|
|
nonzero for the device values to be set. Otherwise, the
|
|
parameters will be unchanged. Negative values generate a Value
|
|
error, as does a zero value for the accel-denominator argument.
|
|
|
|
Some devices are capable of displaying an integer. This is done
|
|
using feedback class IntegerFeedbackClass using the
|
|
IntegerFeedbackControl structure. The members of that structure
|
|
are as follows:
|
|
|
|
INTEGERCTL:
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
length: CARD16
|
|
feedback id: CARD8
|
|
int_to_display: INT32]
|
|
|
|
Some devices are capable of displaying an string. This is done
|
|
using feedback class StringFeedbackClass using the
|
|
StringFeedbackCtl structure. The members of that structure are
|
|
as follows:
|
|
|
|
STRINGCTL:
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
length: CARD16
|
|
feedback id: CARD8
|
|
syms_to_display: LISTofKEYSYMS]
|
|
|
|
Some devices contain a bell. This is done using feedback class
|
|
BellFeedbackClass using the BellFeedbackControl structure. The
|
|
members of that structure are as follows:
|
|
|
|
BELLCTL:
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
length: CARD16
|
|
feedback id: CARD8
|
|
percent: INT8
|
|
pitch: INT16
|
|
duration: INT16]
|
|
|
|
Some devices contain leds. These can be turned on and off using
|
|
the LedFeedbackControl structure. The members of that structure
|
|
are as follows:
|
|
|
|
LEDCTL:
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
length: CARD16
|
|
feedback id: CARD8
|
|
led_mask: BITMASK
|
|
led_value: BITMASK]
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match, Value
|
|
|
|
2.20 Ringing a Bell on an Input Device
|
|
|
|
To ring a bell on an extension input device, use DeviceBell.
|
|
|
|
DeviceBell:
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
feedbackclass: CARD8
|
|
feedbackid: CARD8
|
|
percent: INT8
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Value
|
|
|
|
This request is analogous to the core Bell request. It rings
|
|
the specified bell on the specified input device feedback,
|
|
using the specified volume. The specified volume is relative to
|
|
the base volume for the feedback. If the value for the percent
|
|
argument is not in the range -100 to 100 inclusive, a Value
|
|
error results. The volume at which the bell rings when the
|
|
percent argument is nonnegative is:
|
|
|
|
base - [(base * percent) / 100] + percent
|
|
|
|
The volume at which the bell rings when the percent argument is
|
|
negative is:
|
|
|
|
base + [(base * percent) / 100]
|
|
|
|
To change the base volume of the bell, use
|
|
ChangeFeedbackControl request.
|
|
|
|
Controlling Device Encoding
|
|
|
|
To get the keyboard mapping of an extension device that has
|
|
keys, use GetDeviceKeyMapping.
|
|
|
|
GetDeviceKeyMapping
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
first-keycode: KEYCODE
|
|
count: CARD8
|
|
=>
|
|
keysyms-per-keycode: CARD8
|
|
keysyms: LISTofKEYSYM
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match, Value
|
|
|
|
This request returns the symbols for the specified number of
|
|
keycodes for the specified extension device, starting with the
|
|
specified keycode. The first-keycode must be greater than or
|
|
equal to min-keycode as returned in the connection setup (else
|
|
a Value error), and
|
|
|
|
first-keycode + count - 1
|
|
|
|
must be less than or equal to max-keycode as returned in the
|
|
connection setup (else a Value error). The number of elements
|
|
in the keysyms list is
|
|
|
|
count * keysyms-per-keycode
|
|
|
|
and KEYSYM number N (counting from zero) for keycode K has an
|
|
index (counting from zero) of
|
|
|
|
(K - first-keycode) * keysyms-per-keycode + N
|
|
|
|
in keysyms. The keysyms-per-keycode value is chosen arbitrarily
|
|
by the server to be large enough to report all requested
|
|
symbols. A special KEYSYM value of NoSymbol is used to fill in
|
|
unused elements for individual keycodes.
|
|
|
|
If the specified device has not first been opened by this
|
|
client via OpenDevice, or if that device does not support input
|
|
class Keys, this request will fail with a Device error.
|
|
|
|
To change the keyboard mapping of an extension device that has
|
|
keys, use ChangeDeviceKeyMapping.
|
|
|
|
ChangeDeviceKeyMapping
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
first-keycode: KEYCODE
|
|
keysyms-per-keycode: CARD8
|
|
keysyms: LISTofKEYSYM
|
|
num_codes: CARD8
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match, Value, Alloc
|
|
|
|
This request is analogous to the core ChangeKeyMapping request.
|
|
It defines the symbols for the specified number of keycodes for
|
|
the specified extension device. If the specified device has not
|
|
first been opened by this client via OpenDevice, or if that
|
|
device does not support input class Keys, this request will
|
|
fail with a Device error.
|
|
|
|
The number of elements in the keysyms list must be a multiple
|
|
of keysyms_per_keycode. Otherwise, ChangeDeviceKeyMapping
|
|
generates a Length error. The specified first_keycode must be
|
|
greater than or equal to the min_keycode value returned by the
|
|
ListInputDevices request, or this request will fail with a
|
|
Value error. In addition, if the following expression is not
|
|
less than the max_keycode value returned by the
|
|
ListInputDevices request, the request will fail with a Value
|
|
error:
|
|
|
|
first_keycode + (num_codes / keysyms_per_keycode) - 1
|
|
|
|
To obtain the keycodes that are used as modifiers on an
|
|
extension device that has keys, use GetDeviceModifierMapping.
|
|
|
|
GetDeviceModifierMapping
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
=>
|
|
keycodes-per-modifier: CARD8
|
|
keycodes: LISTofKEYCODE
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match
|
|
|
|
This request is analogous to the core GetModifierMapping
|
|
request. This request returns the keycodes of the keys being
|
|
used as modifiers. The number of keycodes in the list is
|
|
8*keycodes-per-modifier. The keycodes are divided into eight
|
|
sets, with each set containing keycodes-per-modifier elements.
|
|
The sets are assigned in order to the modifiers Shift, Lock,
|
|
Control, Mod1, Mod2, Mod3, Mod4, and Mod5. The
|
|
keycodes-per-modifier value is chosen arbitrarily by the
|
|
server; zeroes are used to fill in unused elements within each
|
|
set. If only zero values are given in a set, the use of the
|
|
corresponding modifier has been disabled. The order of keycodes
|
|
within each set is chosen arbitrarily by the server.
|
|
|
|
To set which keycodes that are to be used as modifiers for an
|
|
extension device, use SetDeviceModifierMapping.
|
|
|
|
SetDeviceModifierMapping
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
keycodes-per-modifier: CARD8
|
|
keycodes: LISTofKEYCODE
|
|
=>
|
|
status: {Success, Busy, Failed}
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match, Value, Alloc
|
|
|
|
This request is analogous to the core SetModifierMapping
|
|
request. This request specifies the keycodes (if any) of the
|
|
keys to be used as modifiers. The number of keycodes in the
|
|
list must be 8*keycodes-per-modifier (else a Length error). The
|
|
keycodes are divided into eight sets, with the sets, with each
|
|
set containing keycodes-per-modifier elements. The sets are
|
|
assigned in order to the modifiers Shift, Lock, Control, Mod1,
|
|
Mod2, Mod3, Mod4, and Mod5. Only non-zero keycode values are
|
|
used within each set; zero values are ignored. All of the
|
|
non-zero keycodes must be in the range specified by min-keycode
|
|
and max-keycode in the ListInputDevices request (else a Value
|
|
error). The order of keycodes within a set does not matter. If
|
|
no non-zero values are specified in a set, the use of the
|
|
corresponding modifier is disabled, and the modifier bit will
|
|
always be zero. Otherwise, the modifier bit will be one
|
|
whenever at least one of the keys in the corresponding set is
|
|
in the down position.
|
|
|
|
A server can impose restrictions on how modifiers can be
|
|
changed (for example, if certain keys do not generate up
|
|
transitions in hardware or if multiple keys per modifier are
|
|
not supported). The status reply is Failed if some such
|
|
restriction is violated, and none of the modifiers are changed.
|
|
|
|
If the new non-zero keycodes specified for a modifier differ
|
|
from those currently defined, and any (current or new) keys for
|
|
that modifier are logically in the down state, then the status
|
|
reply is Busy, and none of the modifiers are changed.
|
|
|
|
This request generates a DeviceMappingNotify event on a Success
|
|
status. The DeviceMappingNotify event will be sent only to
|
|
those clients that have expressed an interest in receiving that
|
|
event via the XSelectExtensionEvent request.
|
|
|
|
A X server can impose restrictions on how modifiers can be
|
|
changed, for example, if certain keys do not generate up
|
|
transitions in hardware or if multiple modifier keys are not
|
|
supported. If some such restriction is violated, the status
|
|
reply is MappingFailed , and none of the modifiers are changed.
|
|
If the new keycodes specified for a modifier differ from those
|
|
currently defined and any (current or new) keys for that
|
|
modifier are in the logically down state, the status reply is
|
|
MappingBusy, and none of the modifiers are changed.
|
|
|
|
2.20 Controlling Button Mapping
|
|
|
|
These requests are analogous to the core GetPointerMapping and
|
|
ChangePointerMapping requests. They allow a client to determine
|
|
the current mapping of buttons on an extension device, and to
|
|
change that mapping.
|
|
|
|
To get the current button mapping for an extension device, use
|
|
GetDeviceButtonMapping.
|
|
|
|
GetDeviceButtonMapping
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
nmap: CARD8
|
|
=>
|
|
map_return: LISTofCARD8
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match
|
|
|
|
The GetDeviceButtonMapping function returns the current mapping
|
|
of the buttons on the specified device. Elements of the list
|
|
are indexed starting from one. The length of the list indicates
|
|
the number of physical buttons. The nominal mapping is the
|
|
identity mapping map[i]=i.
|
|
|
|
nmap indicates the number of elements in the map_return array.
|
|
Only the first nmap entries will be copied by the library into
|
|
the map_return array.
|
|
|
|
To set the button mapping for an extension device, use
|
|
SetDeviceButtonMapping.
|
|
|
|
SetDeviceButtonMapping
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
map: LISTofCARD8
|
|
nmap: CARD8
|
|
=>
|
|
status: CARD8
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device, Match, Value
|
|
|
|
The SetDeviceButtonMapping function sets the mapping of the
|
|
specified device and causes the X server to generate a
|
|
DeviceMappingNotify event on a status of MappingSuccess.
|
|
Elements of the list are indexed starting from one. The length
|
|
of the list, specified in nmap, must be the same as
|
|
GetDeviceButtonMapping would return. Otherwise,
|
|
SetDeviceButtonMapping generates a Value error. A zero element
|
|
disables a button, and elements are not restricted in value by
|
|
the number of physical buttons. If any of the buttons to be
|
|
altered are in the down state, the status reply is MappingBusy
|
|
and the mapping is not changed.
|
|
|
|
In servers supporting XI 1.x, no two elements can have the same
|
|
nonzero value. Otherwise, this function generates a Value
|
|
error.
|
|
|
|
2.21 Obtaining The State Of A Device
|
|
|
|
To obtain vectors that describe the state of the keys, buttons
|
|
and valuators of an extension device, use QueryDeviceState.
|
|
|
|
QueryDeviceState
|
|
device: DEVICE
|
|
=>
|
|
device-id: CARD8
|
|
data: LISTofINPUTCLASS
|
|
|
|
where
|
|
|
|
INPUTCLASS: {VALUATOR, BUTTON, KEY}
|
|
CLASS VALUATOR:
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
num_valuators: CARD8
|
|
mode: CARD8
|
|
#x01 device mode (0 = Relative, 1 = Absolute)
|
|
#x02 proximity state (0 = InProximity, 1 = OutOfProximity)
|
|
valuators: LISTofINT32]
|
|
CLASS BUTTON:
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
num_buttons: CARD8
|
|
buttons: LISTofCARD8]
|
|
CLASS KEY:
|
|
[class: CARD8
|
|
num_keys: CARD8
|
|
keys: LISTofCARD8]
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device
|
|
|
|
The QueryDeviceState request returns the current logical state
|
|
of the buttons, keys, and valuators on the specified input
|
|
device. The buttons and keys arrays, byte N (from 0) contains
|
|
the bits for key or button 8N to 8N+7 with the least
|
|
significant bit in the byte representing key or button 8N.
|
|
|
|
If the device has valuators, a bit in the mode field indicates
|
|
whether the device is reporting Absolute or Relative data. If
|
|
it is reporting Absolute data, the valuators array will contain
|
|
the current value of the valuators. If it is reporting Relative
|
|
data, the valuators array will contain undefined data.
|
|
|
|
If the device reports proximity information, a bit in the mode
|
|
field indicates whether the device is InProximity or
|
|
OutOfProximity.
|
|
|
|
2.22 Listing Device Properties
|
|
|
|
Introduced with XI 1.5
|
|
|
|
ListDeviceProperties
|
|
deviceid: CARD8
|
|
=>
|
|
nAtoms: CARD16
|
|
Atoms: LISTofATOM
|
|
|
|
Errors: Device
|
|
|
|
Each device can store an arbitrary number of properties. These
|
|
properties can be allocated by either the client or the driver.
|
|
The client can change device properties and the server
|
|
guarantees that the device driver is notified about a change of
|
|
the device's properties.
|
|
|
|
ListDeviceProperties returns all properties of a device. The
|
|
client is expected to retrieve details about the properties it
|
|
is interested in separately.
|
|
|
|
2.23 Getting a Device Property
|
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Introduced with XI 1.5
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GetDeviceProperty:
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property: ATOM
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type: ATOM
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longOffset: CARD32
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longLength: CARD32
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deviceid: CARD8
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delete: BOOL
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=>
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propertyType: ATOM
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bytesAfter: CARD32
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nItems: CARD32
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format: CARD8
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deviceid: CARD8
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data: [LISTofCARD8]
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Errors: Atom, Device, Value, Access
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Retrieve the value for a property. If the property does not
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exist, propertyType is None and all other fields are undefined.
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If type is not AnyPropertyType and does not match the
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property's actual type, the propertyType, bytesAfter, and
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format are returned but not the actual data.
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longOffset and longLength specify the offset and length
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respectively in 32-bit multiples of the data to retrieve.
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If delete is True, the property is deleted after querying its
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data. If the property cannot be deleted, a BadAccess error is
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returned.
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propertyType returns the atom identifier that defines the
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actual type of the property.
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If bytesAfter is non-zero, it specifies the number of data
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4-byte units after the retrieved chunk of data.
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format specifies whether the data should be viewed as a list of
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8-bit, 16-bit, or 32-bit quantities. Possible values are 8, 16,
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and 32. This information allows the X server to correctly
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perform byte-swap operations as necessary.
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nItem specifies the number of 8-bit, 16-bit, or 32-bit items
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returned after the request.
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2.24 Changing a Device Property
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Introduced with XI 1.5
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ChangeDeviceProperty:
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property: ATOM
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type: ATOM
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deviceid: CARD8
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format: CARD8
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mode: CARD8
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nUnits: CARD32
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Errors: Atom, Device, Value, Match, Access
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Changes the value of a specified property.
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The type specifies the atom identifier that defines the type of
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the property. If mode is not PropModeReplace, the type must
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match the current type of the property or a BadMatch error is
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returned.
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format specifies whether the data should be viewed as a list of
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8-bit, 16-bit, or 32-bit quantities. Possible values are 8, 16,
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and 32. This information allows the X server to correctly
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perform byte-swap operations as necessary.
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If mode is PropModeReplace, a preexising value for this
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property is replaced with the new value. If mode is
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PropModePrepend or PropModeAppend, the value is prepended or
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appended, respectively, to the current value of the property.
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nUnits specifies the number of 8-bit, 16-bit, or 32-bit items
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supplied after the reply.
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Changing a device property results in a
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DevicePropertyNotifyEvent being sent to all clients.
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2.25 Deleting a Device Property
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Introduced with XI 1.5
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DeleteDeviceProperty:
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property: ATOM
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deviceid: CARD8
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Errors: Atom, Device, Match, Access.
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Deletes the specified property. If the property cannot be
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deleted by the client, a BadAccess error is returned.
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3. Events
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The input extension creates input events analogous to the core
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input events. These extension input events are generated by
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manipulating one of the extension input devices.
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3.1 Button, Key, and Motion Events
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DeviceKeyPress
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DeviceKeyRelease
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DeviceButtonPress,
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DeviceButtonRelease
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DeviceMotionNotify
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device: CARD8
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root, event: WINDOW
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child: Window or None
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same-screen: BOOL
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root-x, root-y, event-x, event-y: INT16
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detail: <see below>
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state: SETofKEYBUTMASK
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time: TIMESTAMP
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These events are generated when a key, button, or valuator
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logically changes state. The generation of these logical
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changes may lag the physical changes, if device event
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processing is frozen. Note that DeviceKeyPress and
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DeviceKeyRelease are generated for all keys, even those mapped
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to modifier bits. The “source” of the event is the window the
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pointer is in. The window with respect to which the event is
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normally reported is found by looking up the hierarchy
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(starting with the source window) for the first window on which
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any client has selected interest in the event. The actual
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window used for reporting can be modified by active grabs and
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by the focus window.The window the event is reported with
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respect to is called the “event” window.
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The root is the root window of the “source” window, and root-x
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and root-y are the pointer coordinates relative to root's
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origin at the time of the event. Event is the “event” window.
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If the event window is on the same screen as root, then event-x
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and event-y are the pointer coordinates relative to the event
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window's origin. Otherwise, event-x and event-y are zero. If
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the source window is an inferior of the event window, then
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child is set to the child of the event window that is an
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ancestor of (or is) the source window. Otherwise, it is set to
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None.
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The state component gives the logical state of the buttons on
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the X pointer and modifier keys on the core X keyboard just
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before the event.
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The detail component type varies with the event type:
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Event Component
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DeviceKeyPress KEYCODE
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DeviceKeyRelease KEYCODE
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DeviceButtonPress BUTTON
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DeviceButtonRelease BUTTON
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DeviceMotionNotify { Normal , Hint }
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The granularity of motion events is not guaranteed, but a
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client selecting for motion events is guaranteed to get at
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least one event when a valuator changes. If DeviceMotionHint is
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selected, the server is free to send only one
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DeviceMotionNotify event (with detail Hint) to the client for
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the event window, until either a key or button changes state,
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the pointer leaves the event window, or the client issues a
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QueryDeviceState or GetDeviceMotionEvents request.
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3.2 DeviceValuator Event
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DeviceValuator
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device: CARD8
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device_state: SETofKEYBUTMASK
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num_valuators: CARD8
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first_valuator: CARD8
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valuators: LISTofINT32
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DeviceValuator events are generated to contain valuator
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information for which there is insufficient space in DeviceKey,
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DeviceButton, DeviceMotion, and Proximity wire events. For
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events of these types, a second event of type DeviceValuator
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follows immediately. The library combines these events into a
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single event that a client can receive via XNextEvent.
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DeviceValuator events are not selected for by clients, they
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only exist to contain information that will not fit into some
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event selected by clients.
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The device_state component gives the state of the buttons and
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modifiers on the device generating the event.
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Extension motion devices may report motion data for a variable
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number of axes. The valuators array contains the values of all
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axes reported by the device. If more than 6 axes are reported,
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more than one DeviceValuator event will be sent by the server,
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and more than one DeviceKey, DeviceButton, DeviceMotion, or
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Proximity event will be reported by the library. Clients should
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examine the corresponding fields of the event reported by the
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library to determine the total number of axes reported, and the
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first axis reported in the current event. Axes are numbered
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beginning with zero.
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For Button, Key and Motion events on a device reporting
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absolute motion data the current value of the device's
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valuators is reported. For devices that report relative data,
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Button and Key events may be followed by a DeviceValuator event
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that contains 0s in the num_valuators field. In this case, only
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the device_state component will have meaning.
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3.3 Device Focus Events
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DeviceFocusIn
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DeviceFocusOut
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device: CARD8
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time: TIMESTAMP
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event: WINDOW
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mode: { Normal, WhileGrabbed, Grab, Ungrab}
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detail: { Ancestor, Virtual, Inferior, Nonlinear,
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NonlinearVirtual, Pointer, PointerRoot, None}
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These events are generated when the input focus changes and are
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reported to clients selecting DeviceFocusChange for the
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specified device and window. Events generated by SetDeviceFocus
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when the device is not grabbed have mode Normal. Events
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generated by SetDeviceFocus when the device is grabbed have
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mode WhileGrabbed. Events generated when a device grab actives
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have mode Grab, and events generated when a device grab
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deactivates have mode Ungrab.
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All DeviceFocusOut events caused by a window unmap are
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generated after any UnmapNotify event, but the ordering of
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DeviceFocusOut with respect to generated EnterNotify,
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LeaveNotify, VisibilityNotify and Expose events is not
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constrained.
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DeviceFocusIn and DeviceFocusOut events are generated for focus
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changes of extension devices in the same manner as focus events
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for the core devices are generated.
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3.4 Device State Notify Event
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DeviceStateNotify
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time: TIMESTAMP
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device: CARD8
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num_keys: CARD8
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num_buttons: CARD8
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num_valuators: CARD8
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classes_reported: CARD8 {SetOfDeviceMode | SetOfInputClass}
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SetOfDeviceMode:
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#x80 ProximityState 0 = InProxmity, 1 = OutOfProximity
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#x40 Device Mode (0 = Relative, 1 = Absolute)
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SetOfInputClass: #x04 reporting valuators
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#x02 reporting buttons
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#x01 reporting keys
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buttons: LISTofCARD8
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keys: LISTofCARD8
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valuators: LISTofCARD32
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This event reports the state of the device just as in the
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QueryDeviceState request. This event is reported to clients
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selecting DeviceStateNotify for the device and window and is
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generated immediately after every EnterNotify and
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DeviceFocusIn. If the device has no more than 32 buttons, no
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more than 32 keys, and no more than 3 valuators, This event can
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report the state of the device. If the device has more than 32
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buttons, the event will be immediately followed by a
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DeviceButtonStateNotify event. If the device has more than 32
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keys, the event will be followed by a DeviceKeyStateNotify
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event. If the device has more than 3 valuators, the event will
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be followed by one or more DeviceValuator events.
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3.5 Device KeyState and ButtonState Notify Events
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DeviceKeyStateNotify
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device: CARD8
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keys: LISTofCARD8
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DeviceButtonStateNotify
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device: CARD8
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buttons: LISTofCARD8
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These events contain information about the state of keys and
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buttons on a device that will not fit into the
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DeviceStateNotify wire event. These events are not selected by
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clients, rather they may immediately follow a DeviceStateNotify
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wire event and be combined with it into a single
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DeviceStateNotify client event that a client may receive via
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XNextEvent.
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3.6 DeviceMappingNotify Event
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DeviceMappingNotify
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time: TIMESTAMP
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device: CARD8
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request: CARD8
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first_keycode: CARD8
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count: CARD8
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This event reports a change in the mapping of keys, modifiers,
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or buttons on an extension device. This event is reported to
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clients selecting DeviceMappingNotify for the device and window
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and is generated after every client SetDeviceButtonMapping,
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ChangeDeviceKeyMapping, or ChangeDeviceModifierMapping request.
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3.7 ChangeDeviceNotify Event
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ChangeDeviceNotify
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device: CARD8
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time: TIMESTAMP
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request: CARD8
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This event reports a change in the physical device being used
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as the core X keyboard or X pointer device. ChangeDeviceNotify
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events are reported to clients selecting ChangeDeviceNotify for
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the device and window and is generated after every client
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ChangeKeyboardDevice or ChangePointerDevice request.
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3.7 Proximity Events
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ProximityIn
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ProximityOut
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device: CARD8
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root, event: WINDOW
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child: Window or None
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same-screen: BOOL
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root-x, root-y, event-x, event-y: INT16
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state: SETofKEYBUTMASK
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time: TIMESTAMP
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device-state: SETofKEYBUTMASK
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axis-count: CARD8
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first-axis: CARD8
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axis-data: LISTofINT32
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These events are generated by some devices (such as graphics
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tablets or touchscreens) to indicate that a stylus has moved
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into or out of contact with a positional sensing surface.
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The “source” of the event is the window the pointer is in. The
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window with respect to which the event is normally reported is
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found by looking up the hierarchy (starting with the source
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window) for the first window on which any client has selected
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interest in the event. The actual window used for reporting can
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be modified by active grabs and by the focus window.The window
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the event is reported with respect to is called the “event”
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window.
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The root is the root window of the “source” window, and root-x
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and root-y are the pointer coordinates relative to root's
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origin at the time of the event. Event is the “event” window.
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If the event window is on the same screen as root, then event-x
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and event-y are the pointer coordinates relative to the event
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window's origin. Otherwise, event-x and event-y are zero. If
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the source window is an inferior of the event window, then
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child is set to the child of the event window that is an
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ancestor of (or is) the source window. Otherwise, it is set to
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None. The state component gives the logical state of the
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buttons on the core X pointer and modifier keys on the core X
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keyboard just before the event. The device-state component
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gives the state of the buttons and modifiers on the device
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generating the event.
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3.8 DevicePresenceEvents
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Introduced with XI 1.4.
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DevicePresence
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time: TIMESTAMP
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devchange: BYTE
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#x00: DeviceAdded
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#x01: DeviceRemoved
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#x02: DeviceEnabled
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#x03: DeviceDisabled
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#x04: DeviceUnrecoverable
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#x05: DeviceControlChanged
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deviceid: BYTE
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control: CARD16
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DevicePresence events are sent when the server adds or removes,
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or enables or disables an input device. The client is expected
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to query the server for the list of input devices using the
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ListInputDevices request to obtain the updated list of input
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devices. DevicePresence events are also sent when a control on
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the device has been changed.
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The devchange field specifies the type of operation. In case of
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DeviceAdded, a new device has been added to the server, but
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this device does not yet send events. If devchange is set to
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DeviceEnabled, the device is enabled and will generate events.
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If the field is DeviceDisabled or DeviceRemoved, the given
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device is disabled and stops sending events or was removed from
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the server, respectively. If the field is DeviceUnrecoverable,
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an IO-error has occured on the device and the device is
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forcibly disabled and removed by the server. If devchange is
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DeviceControlChanged, control specifies the type of control
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that has been changed.
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3.9 DevicePropertyNotifyEvent
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Introduced with XI 1.5.
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DevicePropertyNotifyEvent
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deviceid: CARD8
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state: CARD8
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time: TIMESTAMP
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atom: ATOM
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A DevicePropertyNotifyEvent is sent to all clients when a
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property on the device is created, deleted, or changes value.
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The deviceid specifies the device which's property has been
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modified.
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The atom specifies the named identifier of the property that
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has been altered.
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If state is PropertyNewValue, the given property has a new
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value or has been newly created. If state is PropertyDeleted,
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the given property has been deleted.
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