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When the user presses a mouse button and releases it at the same location, that generates a click event. All mouse click event share the same format:
(event-type position click-count)
This is a symbol that indicates which mouse button was
used. It is one of the symbols mouse-1,
mouse-2, …, where the buttons are
numbered left to right.
You can also use prefixes ‘A-’, ‘C-’, ‘H-’, ‘M-’, ‘S-’ and ‘s-’ for modifiers alt, control, hyper, meta, shift and super, just as you would with function keys.
This symbol also serves as the event type of the event.
Key bindings describe events by their types; thus, if there
is a key binding for mouse-1, that binding would
apply to all events whose event-type is
mouse-1.
This is a mouse position list specifying where the mouse click occurred; see below for details.
This is the number of rapid repeated presses so far of the same mouse button. See Repeat Events.
To access the contents of a mouse position list in the position slot of a click event, you should typically use the functions documented in Accessing Mouse. The explicit format of the list depends on where the click occurred. For clicks in the text area, mode line, header line, or in the fringe or marginal areas, the mouse position list has the form
(window pos-or-area (x . y) timestamp object text-pos (col . row) image (dx . dy) (width . height))
The meanings of these list elements are as follows:
The window in which the click occurred.
The buffer position of the character clicked on in the
text area; or, if the click was outside the text area, the
window area where it occurred. It is one of the symbols
mode-line, header-line,
vertical-line, left-margin,
right-margin, left-fringe, or
right-fringe.
In one special case, pos-or-area is a list containing a symbol (one of the symbols listed above) instead of just the symbol. This happens after the imaginary prefix keys for the event are registered by Emacs. See Key Sequence Input.
The relative pixel coordinates of the click. For clicks in
the text area of a window, the coordinate origin (0 .
0) is taken to be the top left corner of the text
area. See Window
Sizes. For clicks in a mode line or header line, the
coordinate origin is the top left corner of the window
itself. For fringes, margins, and the vertical border,
x does not have meaningful data. For fringes and
margins, y is relative to the bottom edge of the
header line. In all cases, the x and y
coordinates increase rightward and downward respectively.
The time at which the event occurred, as an integer number of milliseconds since a system-dependent initial time.
Either nil if there is no string-type text
property at the click position, or a cons cell of the form
(string . string-pos) if there is
one:
The string which was clicked on, including any properties.
The position in the string where the click occurred.
For clicks on a marginal area or on a fringe, this is the
buffer position of the first visible character in the
corresponding line in the window. For clicks on the mode line
or the header line, this is nil. For other
events, it is the buffer position closest to the click.
These are the actual column and row coordinate numbers of the glyph under the x, y position. If x lies beyond the last column of actual text on its line, col is reported by adding fictional extra columns that have the default character width. Row 0 is taken to be the header line if the window has one, or the topmost row of the text area otherwise. Column 0 is taken to be the leftmost column of the text area for clicks on a window text area, or the leftmost mode line or header line column for clicks there. For clicks on fringes or vertical borders, these have no meaningful data. For clicks on margins, col is measured from the left edge of the margin area and row is measured from the top of the margin area.
This is the image object on which the click occurred. It
is either nil if there is no image at the
position clicked on, or it is an image object as returned by
find-image if click was in an image.
These are the pixel coordinates of the click, relative to
the top left corner of object, which is (0 .
0). If object is nil, the
coordinates are relative to the top left corner of the
character glyph clicked on.
These are the pixel width and height of object
or, if this is nil, those of the character glyph
clicked on.
For clicks on a scroll bar, position has this form:
(window area (portion . whole) timestamp part)
The window whose scroll bar was clicked on.
This is the symbol vertical-scroll-bar.
The number of pixels from the top of the scroll bar to the
click position. On some toolkits, including GTK+, Emacs
cannot extract this data, so the value is always
0.
The total length, in pixels, of the scroll bar. On some
toolkits, including GTK+, Emacs cannot extract this data, so
the value is always 0.
The time at which the event occurred, in milliseconds. On
some toolkits, including GTK+, Emacs cannot extract this
data, so the value is always 0.
The part of the scroll bar on which the click occurred. It
is one of the symbols handle (the scroll bar
handle), above-handle (the area above the
handle), below-handle (the area below the
handle), up (the up arrow at one end of the
scroll bar), or down (the down arrow at one end
of the scroll bar).
Next: Drag Events, Previous: Mouse Events, Up: Input Events [Contents][Index]