The functions mouse-position
and set-mouse-position
give access to the current position of the mouse.
This function returns a description of the position of the mouse. The value looks like (frame x . y)
, where x and y are integers giving the (possibly rounded) position in multiples of the default character size of frame (see Frame Font) relative to the native position of frame (see Frame Geometry).
If non-nil
, the value of this variable is a function for mouse-position
to call. mouse-position
calls this function just before returning, with its normal return value as the sole argument, and it returns whatever this function returns to it.
This abnormal hook exists for the benefit of packages like xt-mouse.el that need to do mouse handling at the Lisp level.
This function warps the mouse to position x, y in frame frame. The arguments x and y are integers, giving the position in multiples of the default character size of frame (see Frame Font) relative to the native position of frame (see Frame Geometry).
The resulting mouse position is constrained to the native frame of frame. If frame is not visible, this function does nothing. The return value is not significant.
This function is like mouse-position
except that it returns coordinates in units of pixels rather than units of characters.
This function warps the mouse like set-mouse-position
except that x and y are in units of pixels rather than units of characters.
The resulting mouse position is not constrained to the native frame of frame. If frame is not visible, this function does nothing. The return value is not significant.
On a graphical terminal the following two functions allow the absolute position of the mouse cursor to be retrieved and set.
This function returns a cons cell (x . y) of the coordinates of the mouse cursor position in pixels, relative to a position (0, 0) of the selected frame’s display.
This function moves the mouse cursor to the position (x, y). The coordinates x and y are interpreted in pixels relative to a position (0, 0) of the selected frame’s display.
The following function can tell whether the mouse cursor is currently visible on a frame:
This predicate function returns non-nil
if the mouse pointer displayed on frame is visible; otherwise it returns nil
. frame omitted or nil
means the selected frame. This is useful when make-pointer-invisible
is set to t
: it allows you to know if the pointer has been hidden. See Mouse Avoidance in The Emacs Manual.
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Licensed under the GNU GPL license.
https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/elisp/Mouse-Position.html