Warning |
This function is EXPERIMENTAL. The behaviour of this function, the name of this function, and anything else documented about this function may change without notice in a future release of PHP. Use this function at your own risk. |
Sets mouse events to be reported. By default no mouse events will be reported.
Mouse events are represented by NCURSES_KEY_MOUSE in the ncurses_wgetch() input stream. To read the event data and pop the event of queue, call ncurses_getmouse().
newmask
Mouse mask options can be set with the following predefined constants:
NCURSES_BUTTON1_PRESSED
NCURSES_BUTTON1_RELEASED
NCURSES_BUTTON1_CLICKED
NCURSES_BUTTON1_DOUBLE_CLICKED
NCURSES_BUTTON1_TRIPLE_CLICKED
NCURSES_BUTTON2_PRESSED
NCURSES_BUTTON2_RELEASED
NCURSES_BUTTON2_CLICKED
NCURSES_BUTTON2_DOUBLE_CLICKED
NCURSES_BUTTON2_TRIPLE_CLICKED
NCURSES_BUTTON3_PRESSED
NCURSES_BUTTON3_RELEASED
NCURSES_BUTTON3_CLICKED
NCURSES_BUTTON3_DOUBLE_CLICKED
NCURSES_BUTTON3_TRIPLE_CLICKED
NCURSES_BUTTON4_PRESSED
NCURSES_BUTTON4_RELEASED
NCURSES_BUTTON4_CLICKED
NCURSES_BUTTON4_DOUBLE_CLICKED
NCURSES_BUTTON4_TRIPLE_CLICKED
NCURSES_BUTTON_SHIFT>
NCURSES_BUTTON_CTRL
NCURSES_BUTTON_ALT
NCURSES_ALL_MOUSE_EVENTS
NCURSES_REPORT_MOUSE_POSITION
As a side effect, setting a zero mousemask in
newmask
turns off the mouse
pointer. Setting a non zero value turns mouse pointer on.
oldmask
This will be set to the previous value of the mouse event mask.
Returns a mask to indicated which of the in parameter
newmask
specified mouse events can be reported. On
complete failure, it returns 0.