I want to load a custom mouse cursor that will invert as it does for the Windows Inverted (System Scheme) to show the opposite of the colors in an area the cursor is occupying, hither, the "inverted" coloration of pixels; when loading another - custom - file the cursor does not reflect any inverted-color-behaviorism. Deliberately clicking the 'Mouse Pointer Style' in accessibility to Inverted will revert to the native default of an inverted system default cursor, nullifying the user's option of a custom cursor; am I indicated here that I have to make a change in the file itself or registry to accept cursor/file as invert-able?

I have edited the default Aero Arrow mouse cursor from Windows 7, added a little icon to it and saved it as new .cur file. The cursor editor is RealWorld Cursor Editor 2013.1 which seems to be good at that. The new cursor works fine when I select it as part of my Windows cursor theme. It also has a shadow like the default cursor or any other.


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But when I use this cursor in my application as a custom cursor, it has no shadow. The alpha blending is displayed correctly (the Aero arrow cursor has slightly anti-aliased edges, not like the old Win2k cursor that had pixel-sharp edges). Just the system-generated shadow is missing. You know, the shadow that can be enabled in the user's mouse pointer settings.

RealWorld Cursor Editor can create and edit cursors, both static and animated. You can draw your cursors pixel by pixel or make them from images using a simple wizard. Images in cursors can be modified by drawing tools such as Lines, Curves, Rectangles, or Ellipses. A drag-and-drop based interface allows users to easily reorder, duplicate, or append frames to animated cursors.


The program contains several predefined filters covering color corrections, softening, sharpening, motion blur and other effects. Selected filters (for example drop shadow) can be applied on multiple images at once.


Can import cursors from Linux XCursor format.

This tutorial teaches you how to create an animated cursor for Windows. The cursor is created with RealWorld Cursor Editor 2007.1 with 3D module installed.

This guide is intended for people with basic knowledge about RealWorld Cursor Editor. 

In part two the individual frames are defined. Each frame is using different values for parameters and all frames share the same light and camera setting (hence the rather long view angle tuning at the beginning). 

The final step of mouse pointer creation. The raw table tennis racket cursor created in previous step is finetuned - animation speed is increased, hot spot is set and drop shadow effect is added.

Among the different aspects of your operating system that can be customized, cursors allow you to go a step further in giving Windows your personal touch. RealWorld Cursor Editor offers us different tools to do so without any problems whatsoever.

It's right before our eyes but we hardly give it a second's thought. The humble cursor, that goes flitting about the screen doing what our thoughts command it to do. Could it be the most neglected aspect of our computer's personalization? After all, it's the desktop and the icons that get to be the eye candy.

The freeware cursor application helps us create beautiful cursors "static or animated from image files. More importantly, one doesn't have to have a degree in Fine Arts to design the cursors. A friendly wizard takes us through the steps. The drag and drop interface like any good graphic editor also gives it another point on the scale of user friendliness.

Firing up the cursor editor reveals the wizard which gives us a few options to start off our first cursor project. We can make a free cursor from scratch or use an image as the starting point instead of drawing it out on the canvas.

For the first time user, it would be preferable to catch the online tutorials by clicking on the large Online button on the left panel. Six tutorials cover the scope of this cursor program. The first (Animated water drop cursor) or the second (Create resizing cursor) would be the stepping stone to learn all the tools in the program.

The tools are intuitively arranged around the raster image editor. The RealWorld Cursor Editor comes with a full complement of drawing tools (Pencil, Line, Curve, Rounded Rectangle, Ellipse, Flood Fill, Text, and Projected Shadow) and a few tool presets and filter effects. Effects like Drop Shadow, Brightness, Contrast, Gamma, Transparency, Motion Blur, Bevels etc can be run on the cursor image or a selected area. The program comes with a full color swatch and support for layers. (See main screenshot too)

A cursor is different from an icon in the way it interacts with the screen. In both static and animated cursors, the hot spot is the vital area. The hot spot is an intended pixel that fixes the clicking point. So cursor editors should have features that can handle these actions.

Cursor hot spots can be selected with a click of the hot spot tool. The Test Area is where the cursor can be previewed. If the cursor does not move correctly, the hot spot can be changed accordingly using the tool.

Similarly, the animated cursors can be created frame by frame. Sequencing the animations takes a few seconds with the left right shifting arrows. Frames can be selected for applying effects one at a time or by all. Setting the speed of the animations is a cinch with the slider. The time between frames is a matter of setting the seconds using a dropdown.

Some users create new textures and change the look of Renoise. With the cursors it is possible to do the same. You just have to create the same correctly constructed cursors and respect the names and format.

RealWorld Cursor Editor can create and edit static and animated Windows cursors. Cursors are created from images using a simple wizard. Images in cursors can be modified by drawing tools such as Lines, Curves, Rectangles, or Ellipses. A drag-and-drop based interface allows users to easily reorder, duplicate, or append frames to animated cursors.

RealWorld Cursor Editor can create and edit static and animated Windows cursors. Cursors are created from images using a simple wizard. Images in cursors can be modified by drawing tools such as Lines, Curves, Rectangles, or Ellipses. A drag-and-drop based interface allows users to easily reorder, duplicate, or append frames to animated cursors. Application...

Software developers frequently refactor code. Often, a single logical refactoring change involves changing multiple related components in a source base such as renaming each occurrence of a variable or function. While many code editors can perform such common and generic refactorings, they do not support more complex refactorings or those that are specific to a given code base. For those, as a flexible---albeit less interactive---alternative, developers can write refactoring scripts that can implement arbitrarily complex logic by manipulating the program's tree representation. In this work, we present Forest, a structural code editor that aims to bridge the gap between the interactiveness of code editors and the expressiveness of refactoring scripts. While structural editors have occupied a niche as general code editors, the key insight of this work is that they enable a novel structural multi-cursor design that allows Forest to reach a similar expressiveness as refactoring scripts; Forest allows to perform a single action simultaneously in multiple program locations and thus support complex refactorings. To support interactivity, Forest provides features typical for text code editors such as writing and displaying the program through its textual representation. Our evaluation demonstrates that Forest allows performing edits similar to those from refactoring scripts, while still being interactive. We attempted to perform edits from 48 real-world refactoring scripts using Forest and found that 11 were possible, while another 17 would be possible with added features. We believe that a multi-cursor setting plays to the strengths of structural editing, since it benefits from reliable and expressive commands. Our results suggest that multi-cursor structural editors could be practical for performing small-scale specialized refactorings. 9af72c28ce

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