Mercurial > sdl-ios-xcode
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Date: Tue, 11 May 2004 22:05:32 -0400
From: Bob Ippolito
Subject: [SDL] SDL_QuartzWM patches
I've sent in two small patches to SDL_QuartzWM directly to Sam over the
past few months (well, I think I sent both anyway) and neither of them
have been implemented. I didn't receive a response, so I'm sure he was
just busy and/or they got lost, so I decided to sign up to the list and
post them here.
This patch rolls both of them together:
- Mouse cursor becomes visible if hidden when it moves outside of the
game window. If you want it to stay invisible you should warp it
because if it's not warped a user might click some random other
application! Commercial games behave in this way (or at least Warcraft
III does, which is the only one that uses a custom mouse cursor and no
warping that I've played in recent memory).
- Right mouse button emulation is changed from Command-Click to
Control-Click, which is how OS X behaves.
Consider copyright assigned to whomever needs it under whichever
license it needs to be under.. yadda yadda yadda.
author | Sam Lantinga <slouken@libsdl.org> |
---|---|
date | Mon, 17 May 2004 00:16:24 +0000 |
parents | 61b7f5eed0e8 |
children | ca3718c215af |
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Simple DirectMedia Layer (SDL) Version 1.2 --- http://www.libsdl.org/ This is the Simple DirectMedia Layer, a general API that provides low level access to audio, keyboard, mouse, joystick, 3D hardware via OpenGL, and 2D framebuffer across multiple platforms. SDL is written in C, but works with C++ natively, and has bindings to several other languages, including Ada, C#, Eiffel, Java, Lua, ML, Objective C, Perl, PHP, Pike, Python, and Ruby. The current version supports Linux, Windows, BeOS, MacOS, MacOS X, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, BSD/OS, Solaris, IRIX, and QNX. The code contains support for Windows CE, AmigaOS, Dreamcast, Atari, NetBSD, AIX, OSF/Tru64, RISC OS, and SymbianOS, but these are not officially supported. This library is distributed under GNU LGPL version 2, which can be found in the file "COPYING". This license allows you to use SDL freely in commercial programs as long as you link with the dynamic library. The best way to learn how to use SDL is to check out the header files in the "include" subdirectory and the programs in the "test" subdirectory. The header files and test programs are well commented and always up to date. More documentation is available in HTML format in "./docs/index.html" The test programs in the "test" subdirectory are in the public domain. Frequently asked questions are answered online: http://www.libsdl.org/faq.php If you need help with the library, or just want to discuss SDL related issues, you can join the developers mailing list: http://www.libsdl.org/mailing-list.php Enjoy! Sam Lantinga (slouken@libsdl.org)