PySide6.QtGui.QTabletEvent¶
- class QTabletEvent¶
The
QTabletEvent
class contains parameters that describe a Tablet event. More…Synopsis¶
Methods¶
def
__init__()
def
__repr__()
def
globalPos()
def
globalPosF()
def
globalX()
def
globalY()
def
hiResGlobalX()
def
hiResGlobalY()
def
pos()
def
posF()
def
pressure()
def
rotation()
def
uniqueId()
def
x()
def
xTilt()
def
y()
def
yTilt()
def
z()
Note
This documentation may contain snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python. We always welcome contributions to the snippet translation. If you see an issue with the translation, you can also let us know by creating a ticket on https:/bugreports.qt.io/projects/PYSIDE
Detailed Description¶
Tablet events are generated from tablet peripherals such as Wacom tablets and various other brands, and electromagnetic stylus devices included with some types of tablet computers. (It is not the same as
QTouchEvent
which a touchscreen generates, even when a passive stylus is used on a touchscreen.)Tablet events are similar to mouse events; for example, the
x()
,y()
,pos()
,globalX()
,globalY()
, andglobalPos()
accessors provide the cursor position, and you can see whichbuttons()
are pressed (pressing the stylus tip against the tablet surface is equivalent to a left mouse button). But tablet events also pass through some extra information that the tablet device driver provides; for example, you might want to do subpixel rendering with higher resolution coordinates (globalPosF()
), adjust color brightness based on thepressure()
of the tool against the tablet surface, use different brushes depending on the type of tool in use (deviceType()
), modulate the brush shape in some way according to the X-axis and Y-axis tilt of the tool with respect to the tablet surface (xTilt()
andyTilt()
), and use a virtual eraser instead of a brush if the user switches to the other end of a double-ended stylus (pointerType()
).Every event contains an accept flag that indicates whether the receiver wants the event. You should call QTabletEvent::accept() if you handle the tablet event; otherwise it will be sent to the parent widget. The exception are TabletEnterProximity and TabletLeaveProximity events: these are only sent to QApplication and do not check whether or not they are accepted.
The QWidget::setEnabled() function can be used to enable or disable mouse, tablet and keyboard events for a widget.
The event handler QWidget::tabletEvent() receives TabletPress, TabletRelease and TabletMove events. Qt will first send a tablet event, then if it is not accepted by any widget, it will send a mouse event. This allows users of applications that are not designed for tablets to use a tablet like a mouse. However high-resolution drawing applications should handle the tablet events, because they can occur at a higher frequency, which is a benefit for smooth and accurate drawing. If the tablet events are rejected, the synthetic mouse events may be compressed for efficiency.
Note that pressing the stylus button while the stylus hovers over the tablet will generate a button press on some types of tablets, while on other types it will be necessary to press the stylus against the tablet surface in order to register the simultaneous stylus button press.
Notes for X11 Users¶
If the tablet is configured in xorg.conf to use the Wacom driver, there will be separate XInput “devices” for the stylus, eraser, and (optionally) cursor and touchpad. Qt recognizes these by their names. Otherwise, if the tablet is configured to use the evdev driver, there will be only one device and applications may not be able to distinguish the stylus from the eraser.
Notes for Windows Users¶
Tablet support currently requires the WACOM windows driver providing the DLL
wintab32.dll
to be installed. It is contained in older packages, for examplepentablet_5.3.5-3.exe
.- __init__(arg__1)¶
- Parameters:
arg__1 –
QTabletEvent
- __init__(t, device, pos, globalPos, pressure, xTilt, yTilt, tangentialPressure, rotation, z, keyState, button, buttons)
- Parameters:
t –
Type
device –
QPointingDevice
pos –
QPointF
globalPos –
QPointF
pressure – float
xTilt – float
yTilt – float
tangentialPressure – float
rotation – float
z – float
keyState – Combination of
KeyboardModifier
button –
MouseButton
buttons – Combination of
MouseButton
Construct a tablet event of the given
type
.The
pos
parameter indicates where the event occurred in the widget;globalPos
is the corresponding position in absolute coordinates.pressure
gives the pressure exerted on the devicedev
.xTilt
andyTilt
give the device’s degree of tilt from the x and y axes respectively.keyState
specifies which keyboard modifiers are pressed (e.g., Ctrl).The
z
parameter gives the Z coordinate of the device on the tablet; this is usually given by a wheel on a 4D mouse. If the device does not support a Z-axis (i.e.capabilities()
does not includeZPosition
), pass0
here.The
tangentialPressure
parameter gives the tangential pressure thumbwheel value from an airbrush. If the device does not support tangential pressure (i.e.capabilities()
does not includeTangentialPressure
), pass0
here.rotation
gives the device’s rotation in degrees. 4D mice, the Wacom Art Pen, and the Apple Pencil support rotation. If the device does not support rotation (i.e.capabilities()
does not includeRotation
), pass0
here.The
button
that caused the event is given as a value from the Qt::MouseButton enum. If the eventtype
is not TabletPress or TabletRelease, the appropriate button for this event is Qt::NoButton.buttons
is the state of all buttons at the time of the event.See also
pos()
globalPos()
device()
pressure()
xTilt()
yTilt()
uniqueId()
rotation()
tangentialPressure()
z()
- __repr__()¶
- Return type:
str
Use
globalPosition()
.toPoint() instead.Returns the global position of the device at the time of the event. This is important on asynchronous windows systems like X11; whenever you move your widgets around in response to mouse events, globalPos() can differ significantly from the current position
pos()
.Use
globalPosition()
instead. Returns the global position of the device at the time of the event. This is important on asynchronous windows systems like X11; whenever you move your widgets around in response to mouse events, globalPosF() can differ significantly from the current positionpos()
.See also
- globalX()¶
- Return type:
int
Note
This function is deprecated.
Use
globalPosition()
.x()
instead.Returns the global x position of the mouse pointer at the time of the event.
See also
- globalY()¶
- Return type:
int
Note
This function is deprecated.
Use
globalPosition()
.y()
instead.Returns the global y position of the tablet device at the time of the event.
See also
- hiResGlobalX()¶
- Return type:
float
Note
This function is deprecated.
- hiResGlobalY()¶
- Return type:
float
Note
This function is deprecated.
Use
position()
.toPoint() instead.Returns the position of the device, relative to the widget that received the event.
If you move widgets around in response to mouse events, use
globalPos()
instead of this function.See also
Use
position()
instead.Returns the position of the device, relative to the widget that received the event.
If you move widgets around in response to mouse events, use
globalPosF()
instead of this function.See also
- pressure()¶
- Return type:
float
Returns the pressure for the device. 0.0 indicates that the stylus is not on the tablet, 1.0 indicates the maximum amount of pressure for the stylus.
See also
- rotation()¶
- Return type:
float
Returns the rotation of the current tool in degrees, where zero means the tip of the stylus is pointing towards the top of the tablet, a positive value means it’s turned to the right, and a negative value means it’s turned to the left. This can be given by a 4D Mouse or a rotation-capable stylus (such as the Wacom Art Pen or the Apple Pencil). If the device does not support rotation, this value is always 0.0.
- tangentialPressure()¶
- Return type:
float
Returns the tangential pressure for the device. This is typically given by a finger wheel on an airbrush tool. The range is from -1.0 to 1.0. 0.0 indicates a neutral position. Current airbrushes can only move in the positive direction from the neutrual position. If the device does not support tangential pressure, this value is always 0.0.
- uniqueId()¶
- Return type:
int
Note
This function is deprecated.
Use
pointingDevice()
.uniqueId() instead.Returns a unique ID for the current device, making it possible to differentiate between multiple devices being used at the same time on the tablet.
Support of this feature is dependent on the tablet.
Values for the same device may vary from OS to OS.
Later versions of the Wacom driver for Linux will now report the ID information. If you have a tablet that supports unique ID and are not getting the information on Linux, consider upgrading your driver.
As of Qt 4.2, the unique ID is the same regardless of the orientation of the pen. Earlier versions would report a different value when using the eraser-end versus the pen-end of the stylus on some OS’s.
See also
pointerType()
- x()¶
- Return type:
int
Note
This function is deprecated.
Use
position()
.x() instead.Returns the x position of the device, relative to the widget that received the event.
- xTilt()¶
- Return type:
float
Returns the angle between the device (a pen, for example) and the perpendicular in the direction of the x axis. Positive values are towards the tablet’s physical right. The angle is in the range -60 to +60 degrees.
- y()¶
- Return type:
int
Note
This function is deprecated.
Use
position()
.y() instead.Returns the y position of the device, relative to the widget that received the event.
- yTilt()¶
- Return type:
float
Returns the angle between the device (a pen, for example) and the perpendicular in the direction of the y axis. Positive values are towards the bottom of the tablet. The angle is within the range -60 to +60 degrees.
- z()¶
- Return type:
float
Returns the z position of the device. Typically this is represented by a wheel on a 4D Mouse. If the device does not support a Z-axis, this value is always zero. This is not the same as pressure.