Difference between revisions of "Lua API:Event"

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m (Make it more clear you should use the event. constants)
(clarify that constants are not strings)
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=== event.register ===
 
=== event.register ===
 
  event.register(eventType, eventHandler)
 
  event.register(eventType, eventHandler)
Registers an event handler for a certain type of event. See the list of constants at the bottom of the page for possible events you can listen to. Returns eventHandler, in case it's a lambda function and you want to unregister it later.
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Registers an event handler for a certain type of event. See the list of constants at the bottom of the page for possible events you can listen to. The constants exist under the event namespace, not as strings. Returns eventHandler, in case it's a lambda function and you want to unregister it later.
  
 
The event handler will be called with a varying number of arguments, depending on which type of event is being handled. Certain events can also be canceled by returning false from the event.
 
The event handler will be called with a varying number of arguments, depending on which type of event is being handled. Certain events can also be canceled by returning false from the event.
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Example:<br/>
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event.register(event.mousedown, function(x, y) print("mouse clicked at " .. x .. "," .. y) end)
  
 
=== event.unregister ===
 
=== event.unregister ===

Revision as of 22:42, 30 December 2020

The Elements API contains methods and constants for listening to events. This is the api you should use if you want to handle mouse and keyboard input. Shorthand: you can use evt. instead of event.

Methods

event.register

event.register(eventType, eventHandler)

Registers an event handler for a certain type of event. See the list of constants at the bottom of the page for possible events you can listen to. The constants exist under the event namespace, not as strings. Returns eventHandler, in case it's a lambda function and you want to unregister it later.

The event handler will be called with a varying number of arguments, depending on which type of event is being handled. Certain events can also be canceled by returning false from the event.

Example:
event.register(event.mousedown, function(x, y) print("mouse clicked at " .. x .. "," .. y) end)

event.unregister

event.unregister(eventType, eventHandler)

Unregister a previously registered event handler. Has no effect of this function wasn't registered or wasn't registered under this event type.

event.getmodifiers

event.getmodifiers()

Gets the current keyboard modifier state. Includes bits describing whether shift, ctrl, alt, caps lock, num lock, and other modifiers are pressed / set.

Event Types

These event types are all constants under the event api, you should use these constants as arguments to the event.register and event.unregister functions

keypress
This event is sent every time a key is pressed, and continuously re-sent if they key is held down. This event should be used if you want to have a key shortcut; The textinput event should be used instead if you want to handle text input / Unicode.
This event can be canceled
Arguments: key, scan, repeat, shift, ctrl, alt
key is the key code, a number that is usually the ascii value for the key, but for non-printable characters it may be a high number. You can find a list of key codes here: https://wiki.libsdl.org/SDLKeycodeLookup
scan is the scan code. This is a number that represents the physical location of a key on a keyboard. You can find a list of scan codes here: https://wiki.libsdl.org/SDLScancodeLookup
repeat is a boolean that tells whether this is a key repeat event (sent every so often when the key is held down). You may want to ignore this event when it is just a key repeat event
shift / ctrl / alt are booleans that will tell you whether those modifiers are currently held
keyrelease
This event is sent every time a key is released
This event can be canceled
Arguments: key, scan, repeat, shift, ctrl, alt
These arguments mean exactly the same thing as for keypress events. Repeat will always be false.
textinput
This event is sent every time text is input. The text will be sent as a string, and may be more than one character or contain Unicode.
Arguments: text
mousedown
This event is sent whenever the mouse is clicked.
This event can be canceled
Arguments: x, y, button
x and y will not be adjusted for the zoom window. See sim.adjustCoords for that. Coordinates may be outside of the simulation bounds (clicks outside the simulation area are still sent)
button is the mouse button pressed. 1 is left click, 2 is middle click, 3 is right click. There may also be higher mouse buttons like 4 and 5.
mouseup
This event is sent whenever the mouse is released. There are also other some special cases this event may be sent,
This event can be canceled (only when reason = 0)
Arguments: x, y, button, reason
x, y, and button function the same as the mousedown event
reason is a number that describes what type of mouseup event this is (basically, hacks we sent mouseup events on anyway). reason 0 is for normal mouseup events. reason 1 is used when another interface is opened and a blur event is sent. This is how tpt ensures that the mouse isn't "stuck" down forever if you release the mouse after opening another interface. reason 2 is used when the mouse moves inside or outside of the zoom window. This is how tpt cancels mouse drawing with zoom windows to ensure a big line isn't drawn across the screen. The normal reason = 0 event will still be sent later.
mousemove
This event is sent every time the mouse is moved. It is only sent when the mouse is inside the tpt window, unless the mouse is held, in which case it can also be sent outside of the tpt window until the mouse is released. Coordinates from outside the tpt window bounds (including negative coordinates) can be sent in that case.
This event can be canceled
Arguments: x, y, dx, dy
x and y are the mouse coordinates. dx and dy are the diff from the previous coordinates to the current ones.
mousewheel
This event is sent whenever the mousewheel is scrolled.
This event can be canceled
Arguments: x, y, d
x and y are the mouse position where the wheel was scrolled
d is the distance the mouse was scrolled. On nearly all mice this will be 1 or -1, but in certain situations it may be higher. You most likely want to treat higher values as 1 or -1 anyway. Horizontal scrolling is not supported at the moment, in the meantime d will be 0 for horizontal scrolling.
tick
This event is sent once per frame. It is sent after the simulation frame finishes and everything is drawn to the screen.
blur
This event is sent whenever a blocking interface (such as the save browser or the console) is opened. Lua scripts don't function in those interfaces, so this event can be used to detect when the lua script is about to stop receiving any events during that time.
close
This event is sent whenever the tpt window is about to close.