TweetFollow Us on Twitter

Mouse in MacApp
Volume Number:6
Issue Number:12
Column Tag:Jörg's Folder

Related Info: Event Manager

MacApp-Tracking the Mouse

By Jörg Langowski, MacTutor Editorial Board

Note: Source code files accompanying article are located on MacTech CD-ROM or source code disks.

As promised, I will show you this month how to add code that handles mouse tracking to our last example. In the code as it was given in V6#11, we had no explicit mouse tracking routine defined; in that case MacApp uses the default routine, which simply draws the rectangle defined by the mouse starting point and the current mouse position. For dragging an object, this default behavior is quite inconvenient, because you don’t see the exact outline of the object being dragged and can’t position it exactly where you want it.

We would like dragged objects to behave like they do in MacDraw, where an outline of the object follows the mouse. How can one implement this?

All the changes we have do to are to the TDragger class. Specifically, we need to define a TrackFeedback method in this class. This method is called by MacApp’s TApplication.TrackMouse routine while it tracks the mouse. You may draw some shape here, which is then ‘dragged around’ with the mouse: TrackMouse will set the pen to patXOR mode before any calls to the feedback routine. When you move the mouse, the shape is first redrawn at the old position (erasing it that way), then drawn at the new position. All this is handled automatically by TrackMouse; you only need to provide the drawing routine.

So all we would have to do is write a TrackFeedback method that draws the shape at the current mouse position, maybe like this:

/* 1 */

pascal void TDragger::TrackFeedback(VPoint *anchorPoint,
 VPoint *nextPoint, Boolean turnItOn, Boolean mouseDidMove)
{
 Point  delta;

 if (mouseDidMove) {
 delta = fTextView->ViewToQDPt(nextPoint);
 SubPt(fTextView->ViewToQDPt(previousPoint), &delta);
 OffsetRect(&fBox->fLocation,delta.h,delta.v);
 fBox->DrawShape();
 }
}

In the call to the routine, anchorPoint and nextPoint are the starting point of the mouse drag and the current mouse position. mouseDidMove is true when the mouse actually did move since the last call to this routine; and turnItOn is a variable that controls whether feedback should be turned on or off; we don’t use it. To draw the shape at the new mouse position, we calculate the difference between the two coordinates (SubPt) and offset the shape rectangle accordingly; then we draw the shape.

This method should work without problems when you add it to last month’s example (try it, and don’t forget to include the method in the class definition in the header file). Since we change the location rectangle of fBox as we go, we may even simplify the code that changes oldLocation and newLocation at the end of the TDragger.TrackMouse routine; fBox->fLocation is already at its final value when the mouse is released.

However, I would like to show you a different way to do the feedback which can later be used in a much more general way, for instance if we want to drag an outline of a group of different shapes, change the aspect of the shape being dragged around, etc. The principle is taken from an example in the excellent book Programming with MacApp by David Wilson, Larry Rosenstein, and Dan Shafer (Addison-Wesley). We call the routines that we want to use for drawing the shape(s) to be dragged only once, when the mouse is first clicked or at its first movement. At that point, we create a picture, calling all the drawing routines, and store its handle in an instance variable. The TrackFeedback routine will then take this picture handle and call DrawPicture with it.

Creation of the picture, and destruction when we’re done with the dragging, is handled by the TrackMouse routine. When this routine is called, one parameter indicated what track phase we are in: whether the mouse button was just pressed (trackPress), is being held down (trackMove), or has just been released (trackRelease).

The track phase tells us what to do (see listing): when we are in trackPress, we create the picture and save its handle; when we are in trackMove, we offset the picture’s bounds rectangle by the distance the mouse has traveled; finally, in trackRelease, we change the shape’s coordinates to the mouse position and dispose of the picture. If we find out that the shape has not been moved at all out of its old position, we return gNoChanges.

Note that the mouse tracking routine does not do any drawing at all; drawing the dragged shape is done by the TrackFeedback routine, and the final draw of the shape at its new position is of course done when the window is updated automatically. Another point to remember is that you have to set the pen state to PenNormal and patXor when you create the picture (see listing). The current pen state is part of the picture information, so when the picture is created, that pen state will be remembered. The pen state in the TrackMouse routine in the trackPress phase is not the one we want; if you don’t set it to patXor yourself, it will be patCopy (I guess) when the picture is drawn by the feedback routine. That means you will create copies of your shape all over the screen when you drag it. Try it out.

Final words

This was a short Christmas column; next time will be longer, because we’ll add code for different shapes and for dragging a selection of shapes. Also, it might be that my test copy of MacFortran II comes in until then, so that we can finally see those comprehensive benchmarks. Absoft, I want my M F Two...

Listing 1: Changes to the V6#9 example to support track feedback

// Dragging support with custom mouse track feedback
// © JL/MT 10/90
pascal void 
 TDragger::IDragger(TBox *itsBox, 
 TTEDocument *itsDocument, TTextView *itsView)
{
 TScroller *aScroller;

 aScroller = itsView->GetScroller(true);
 ICommand(cDragBox, itsDocument, itsView, aScroller);
 fTEDocument = itsDocument;
 fTextView = itsView;
 fBox = itsBox;
 oldLocation = fBox->fLocation;
 newLocation = fBox->fLocation;
}

pascal struct TCommand 
 *TDragger::TrackMouse(TrackPhase aTrackPhase,
 VPoint *anchorPoint, VPoint *previousPoint, 
 VPoint *nextPoint, Boolean mouseDidMove)
{
 Point  delta;
 Rect   r;
 RgnHandleoldClip;
 PenState oldState;
 
 if (aTrackPhase == trackPress) {
 r = fBox->fLocation;
 oldClip = MakeNewRgn();  // MacApp routine
 
// get the old environment for later restore
 GetClip(oldClip);
 GetPenState(&oldState);
// and open a new picture
 fFeedbackPicture = OpenPicture(&r);
 FailNIL(fFeedbackPicture); // be safe
 ClipRect(&r);
// the following lines ARE necessary since the picture 
// remembers the pen state that was in effect when this 
// routine was called.
// Since we are in trackPress, the pen has NOT yet been 
// set to patXOR. Comment out the next two lines, 
// you’ll see interesting effects -- JL
 PenNormal();
 PenMode(patXor);
// draw the shape
 fBox->DrawShape();
 ClosePicture();
 fPictureBounds = r;

// restore old environment
 SetClip(oldClip);
 DisposeRgn(oldClip);
 SetPenState(&oldState);
 
 if (EmptyRect(&(*fFeedbackPicture)->picFrame)) {
 KillPicture(fFeedbackPicture);
 fFeedbackPicture = nil;
 FailNIL(fFeedbackPicture);
 }
 }

 if ((aTrackPhase == trackMove) && mouseDidMove) {
 delta = fTextView->ViewToQDPt(nextPoint);
 SubPt(fTextView->ViewToQDPt(previousPoint), &delta);
// we don’t actually move the shape here, only its picture.
// the move is done in the last phase
 OffsetRect(&fPictureBounds,delta.h,delta.v);
 }

 if ((aTrackPhase == trackRelease) && mouseDidMove) {
 if (fFeedbackPicture != nil)  {
// being paranoid: normally we should never get here if the 
// picture couldn’t be created, but who knows
 KillPicture(fFeedbackPicture);
 fFeedbackPicture = nil; }

 delta = fTextView->ViewToQDPt(nextPoint);
 SubPt(fTextView->ViewToQDPt(anchorPoint), &delta);
 newLocation = oldLocation;
 if ((delta.h == 0) && (delta.v == 0))
 { return gNoChanges;}
// if we get here, something has been changed. 
// move the shape to its new location
 OffsetRect(&newLocation,delta.h,delta.v);
 fBox->fLocation = newLocation;    
 }
 return this;
}

pascal void 
 TDragger::TrackFeedback(VPoint *anchorPoint, 
 VPoint *nextPoint,
 Boolean turnItOn, Boolean mouseDidMove)
{
 Rect r;
 
 if (mouseDidMove && (fFeedbackPicture != nil)) {
 r = fPictureBounds;
 DrawPicture(fFeedbackPicture,&r); // that’s all!! 
 }
}

pascal void TDragger::DoIt()
{
 fTextView->InvalidRect(&newLocation);
 fTextView->InvalidRect(&oldLocation);
}

pascal void TDragger::RedoIt()  
{  
 fBox->fLocation = newLocation;
 DoIt(); 
}

pascal void TDragger::UndoIt()
{
 fBox->fLocation = oldLocation;
 DoIt(); 
}

#ifdef qDebug
pascal void TDragger::Fields(pascal void (*DoToField) 
 (StringPtr fieldName, Ptr fieldAddr, short fieldType, 
 void *link), void *link)
{
 DoToField(“\pTDragger”, nil, bClass, link);
 DoToField(“\pfTEDocument”, 
 (Ptr) &fTEDocument, bObject, link);
 DoToField(“\pfTextView”, 
 (Ptr) &fTextView, bObject, link);
 DoToField(“\pfBox”, (Ptr) &fBox, bObject, link);
 DoToField(“\poldLocation”, 
 (Ptr) &oldLocation, bRect, link);
 DoToField(“\pnewLocation”, 
 (Ptr) &newLocation, bRect, link);
 DoToField(“\pfFeedbackPicture”, 
 (Ptr) &fFeedbackPicture, bHandle, link);
 DoToField(“\pfPictureBounds”, 
 (Ptr) &fPictureBounds, bRect, link);
 inherited::Fields(DoToField, link);
}
#endif

 
AAPL
$570.56
Apple Inc.
+13.59
GOOG
$609.46
Google Inc.
+8.66
MSFT
$29.11
Microsoft Corpora
-0.65
MacNews Search:
Community Search:
view counter

view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter
view counter

Fruit Ninja Gets New Update With Powerup...
Fruit Ninja is about to get its biggest update yet to celebrate its second anniversary on Thursday, May 24th. The key new element in the game appears to be that players will now be able to earn an in-game currency, called starfruit, that can be used to buy new powerups from new characters Gutsu and Truffles, introduced in the new trailer produced... | Read more »
Fotor – CameraBag Review
Fotor – CameraBag Review By Jennifer Allen on May 23rd, 2012 Our Rating: :: PLENTIFULiPhone App - Designed for the iPhone, compatible with the iPad A photography app that wants to be able to do everything that could ever be asked of it.   | Read more »
playGO AP1 is the Next Generation of Aud...
With all of Apple’s relatively recent success in the smartphone and tablet market, we can forget sometimes that what kicked off their modern dominance was a device that simply played music. BICOM, Inc. has been recognizing how important music is to the company with their playGo series of iOS receiver systems. The newest model, the playGo AP1, is... | Read more »
Monkey Pong Review
Monkey Pong Review By Angela LaFollette on May 23rd, 2012 Our Rating: :: BALL BUSTING ACTIONiPhone App - Designed for the iPhone, compatible with the iPad Help the hungry monkey reach all the fruit by bouncing a ball in this family-friendly arcade game.   | Read more »
Heroes & Generals Enters Closed Beta
Creators of Hitman, Roto-Moto, has launched a closed beta of their game, Heroes & Generals. The game is a massively multiplayer first-person shooter involving online fighting between the Axis and Allied forces in Europe. | Read more »
FeedFriendly Review
FeedFriendly Review By Angela LaFollette on May 23rd, 2012 Our Rating: :: EASY TO USEUniversal App - Designed for iPhone and iPad Combine the top three social network newsfeed updates into one location with the help of FeedFriendly.   | Read more »
Favorite 4: Euro 2012 Apps
In a matter of weeks, one of the biggest soccer tournaments out there begins: Euro 2012. Qualification is over and 16 European teams are all lined up to prove which one is the best of the bunch. As a Brit, I’m ever hopeful that England will achieve glory but regardless of what happens, I’ll be enjoying seeing some high quality action. In honor of... | Read more »
Zombie Farm 2 Review
Zombie Farm 2 Review By Rob LeFebvre on May 23rd, 2012 Our Rating: Universal App - Designed for iPhone and iPad Take on the role of a social game farmer who plants both crops AND zombies in this sequel to the original hit, Zombie Farm.   Developer: The Playforge | Read more »
Facebook Pages Manager Does Exactly What...
Sick of hearing about the Facebook IPO? Want to hear about something actually related to the Facebook product? Well, I have good news then. Facebook has launched a new app that will come in handy for users who manage Facebook Pages. | Read more »
Score! Classic Goals Review
Score! Classic Goals Review By Jennifer Allen on May 23rd, 2012 Our Rating: :: GOAL!Universal App - Designed for iPhone and iPad Relive some classic goals by creating them in this addictive soccer game.   | Read more »
All contents are Copyright 1984-2010 by Xplain Corporation. All rights reserved. Theme designed by Icreon.