Mercurial > sdl-ios-xcode
view docs/man3/SDL_SetEventFilter.3 @ 983:7f08bd66f1ca
Date: Fri, 19 Nov 2004 06:23:53 -0800 (PST)
From: Eric Wing
Subject: OS X Mouse inversion problem fix (again)
Here's yet another patch for the OS X mouse inversion
problem. This should fix the problem once and for all.
I know I've said this before, but *This time for
sure!* :)
If you recall, my last patch broke the non-OpenGL
windowed code and caused the inversion to occur there
instead. Max submitted a patch that partially reverted
the changes back which included the os version hack
which is currently the most recent CVS.
Aaron Sullivan identified and reported to the mailing
list the other day, that the last partial regression
of the code broke OS X 10.2. Looking over the results,
I'm thinking that I was slightly more successful than
I thought at unifying the code. I think I was trying
to unify the code base for OpenGL and non-OpenGL
windowed modes for all versions of the OS. It looks
like I failed at at unifying the OpenGL and non-OpenGL
code, but I did succeed at unifying the OS versions.
Thus, we no longer need the hack for the OS version
checks. The partial regression still included an OS
check which is what broke things for < 10.3.
Attached is the patch for SDL_QuartzWM.m. It basically
is a half-line change that removes one of the two
checks that decides if the mouse coordinates need to
be inverted, i.e:
if (system_version >= 0x1030 &&
(SDL_VideoSurface->flags & SDL_OPENGL) )
becomes this:
if(SDL_VideoSurface->flags & SDL_OPENGL)
With Aaron's outstanding help, we have collectively
tested:
windowed OpenGL
windowed non-OpenGL
fullscreen OpenGL
fullscreen non-OpenGL
under OS X 10.2 (Jaguar), 10.3 (Panther), and 10.4
(Tiger).
We don't have access to 10.0 or 10.1, but since the
original problem didn't materialize until 10.3, I'm
hopeful that testing 10.2 is sufficient. And now that
the code is uniform, I'm also hoping we'll be safe
moving forward to deal with future revisions of the OS
with this issue.
author | Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org> |
---|---|
date | Sun, 21 Nov 2004 00:57:47 +0000 |
parents | e5bc29de3f0a |
children | 546f7c1eb755 |
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.TH "SDL_SetEventFilter" "3" "Tue 11 Sep 2001, 22:59" "SDL" "SDL API Reference" .SH "NAME" SDL_SetEventFilter\- Sets up a filter to process all events before they are posted to the event queue\&. .SH "SYNOPSIS" .PP \fB#include "SDL\&.h" .sp \fBvoid \fBSDL_SetEventFilter\fP\fR(\fBSDL_EventFilter filter\fR); .SH "DESCRIPTION" .PP This function sets up a filter to process all events before they are posted to the event queue\&. This is a very powerful and flexible feature\&. The filter is prototyped as: .PP .nf \f(CWtypedef int (*SDL_EventFilter)(const SDL_Event *event);\fR .fi .PP If the filter returns \fB1\fR, then the event will be added to the internal queue\&. If it returns \fB0\fR, then the event will be dropped from the queue\&. This allows selective filtering of dynamically\&. .PP There is one caveat when dealing with the \fBSDL_QUITEVENT\fP event type\&. The event filter is only called when the window manager desires to close the application window\&. If the event filter returns 1, then the window will be closed, otherwise the window will remain open if possible\&. If the quit event is generated by an interrupt signal, it will bypass the internal queue and be delivered to the application at the next event poll\&. .PP .RS \fBNote: .PP Events pushed onto the queue with \fI\fBSDL_PushEvent\fP\fR or \fI\fBSDL_PeepEvents\fP\fR do not get passed through the event filter\&. .RE .PP .RS \fBNote: .PP \fIBe Careful!\fP The event filter function may run in a different thread so be careful what you do within it\&. .RE .SH "SEE ALSO" .PP \fI\fBSDL_Event\fR\fR, \fI\fBSDL_GetEventFilter\fP\fR, \fI\fBSDL_PushEvent\fP\fR ...\" created by instant / docbook-to-man, Tue 11 Sep 2001, 22:59