This event class takes a regular wxWindows mouse event as a parameter, and wraps it so that there is access to all the original methods. This is similar to subclassing, but you can’t subclass a wxWindows event
The goal is to be able to it just like a regular mouse event.
It adds the method:
GetCoords() , which returns an (x,y) tuple in world coordinates.
Another difference is that it is a CommandEvent, which propagates up the window hierarchy until it is handled.
Initialize self. See help(type(self)) for accurate signature. |
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_MouseEvent
(wx.PyCommandEvent)¶This event class takes a regular wxWindows mouse event as a parameter, and wraps it so that there is access to all the original methods. This is similar to subclassing, but you can’t subclass a wxWindows event
The goal is to be able to it just like a regular mouse event.
It adds the method:
GetCoords() , which returns an (x,y) tuple in world coordinates.
Another difference is that it is a CommandEvent, which propagates up the window hierarchy until it is handled.
__init__
(self, EventType, NativeEvent, WinID, Coords = None)¶Initialize self. See help(type(self)) for accurate signature.
GetCoords
(self)¶