The cursor setting should inform users of the mouse operations that can be performed at the current location, including: text selection, activating help or context menus, copying content, resizing tables, and so on. You can specify either the type of cursor using a keyword, or load a specific icon to use (with optional fallback images and mandatory keyword as a final fallback).

The cursor property is specified as zero or more values, separated by commas, followed by a single mandatory keyword value. Each should point to an image file. The browser will try to load the first image specified, falling back to the next if it can't, and falling back to the keyword value if no images could be loaded (or if none were specified).


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The numbers are in units of image pixels. They are relative to the top left corner of the image, which corresponds to "0 0", and are clamped within the boundaries of the cursor image. If these values are not specified, they may be read from the file itself, and will otherwise default to the top-left corner of the image.

The available keywords are listed in the table below. Other than none, which means no cursor, there is an image showing how the cursors used to be rendered. You can hover your mouse over the table rows to see the effect of the different cursor keyword values on your browser today.

While the specification does not limit the cursor image size, user agents commonly restrict them to avoid potential misuse. For example, on Firefox and Chromium cursor images are restricted to 128x128 pixels by default, but it is recommended to limit the cursor image size to 32x32 pixels. Cursor changes using images that are larger than the user-agent maximum supported size will generally just be ignored.

\n The cursor setting should inform users of the mouse operations that can be performed at the current location, including: text selection, activating help or context menus, copying content, resizing tables, and so on.\n You can specify either the type of cursor using a keyword, or load a specific icon to use (with optional fallback images and mandatory keyword as a final fallback).\n

\n The cursor property is specified as zero or more values, separated by commas, followed by a single mandatory keyword value.\n Each should point to an image file.\n The browser will try to load the first image specified, falling back to the next if it can't, and falling back to the keyword value if no images could be loaded (or if none were specified).\n

\n The numbers are in units of image pixels.\n They are relative to the top left corner of the image, which corresponds to \"0 0\", and are clamped within the boundaries of the cursor image.\n If these values are not specified, they may be read from the file itself, and will otherwise default to the top-left corner of the image.\n

\n While the specification does not limit the cursor image size, user agents commonly restrict them to avoid potential misuse.\n For example, on Firefox and Chromium cursor images are restricted to 128x128 pixels by default, but it is recommended to limit the cursor image size to 32x32 pixels. Cursor changes using images that are larger than the user-agent maximum supported size will generally just be ignored.\n

For instance, what type of box are you trying to resize, and in what program or application are you encountering the cursor bug? Additionally, can you describe the specific behavior of the cursor when the bug occurs?

My mouse cursor keeps changing to four black outward facing arrows with a circle in the centre. I don't know how I keep doing this but I can't seem to turn it off once it's on! Anyone have any idea how to switch it back to the usual one, I can't do much after it changes and have to start a new workflow all over again. Thanks.

If you simply press the space bar with the designer as the active window, this will convert your cursor to the shape you describe as long as you're holding the space bar. Here I show you 7 Simple Steps to change your mouse cursor

Windows 10 version: 1803, LibreOffice Writer version: 6.1.5.2 though the problem started before I did that update. All of the sudden Writer has these little lines with left or right arrows everywhere I move my mouse and if I do not click in exactly the right spot it will place the writing cursor in the wrong place. This only started on my desktop computer not my laptop. Sorry if I used any wrong terms, I am not the most tech savvy.

An instructor and myself have both noticed within the last couple days that if using Panopto for Windows and selecting the Highlight Mouse Cursor During Screen Capture option and saving in Settings, the mouse is not highlighted when using Capture PowerPoint. In fact, we don't see the mouse cursor at all.

Also, I just did a quick test, and you can choose to record just the Powerpoint application when using Panopto Capture as the recorder, and the mouse movements will be recorded. In this case, the movements are recorded because it records Powerpoint as a video stream (not still images.) However, The "highlight the mouse cursor" option isn't available in Panopto Capture, but it may still be the way to go if the instructor wants the mouse movements to be shown but not any other application on the machine.

Thank you for the reply. I think I was remembering recording PPT slides as video for bumper graphics, and had to hide the mouse cursor in PowerPoint, which I mistakenly was thinking was the highlighted cursor being available if we chose capture PowerPoint.

I "think" that I've seen a cursor before but now whenever I go into EN and want to edit a note, I'm unable to see one. So I end up guessing where the cursor is and typing/deleting to see where I'm at. Is this a known issue or am I just missing some setting? thanks in advance.

After some tinkering, I realized that when you enumerate a cursor like this, it goes through all the rows. The problem is that the cursor object ends with no more rows and you have to call reset() on the cursor to start it back at the first row again. Since there is still more processing to be done, you'll essentially be iterating over all rows in the cursor twice with enumeration instead of once with your original counter variable. Do you think the extra time it takes to create the enumeration of the cursor is worth it in a case like this? Maybe only for cursors with a small number of rows?

The enumerate function operates against "a sequence, an iterator, or some other object which supports iteration." The data access cursors support iteration, which is also what allows us to use them with a for statement.

Whereas generator expressions are evaluated lazily, comprehensions are not, which means your list comprehension needs to fully iterate over the cursor before returning any and all values in a list. It is for this reason you are having to reset your cursor before doing any processing. Since cursors already support iteration, just pass them directly to enumerate and don't bother building a list of the entire cursor.

I am not sure what the benefit would be of using enumeration. If I loop through the cursor using the standard method (for row in cursor) and keep track of a counter, that is little overhead, I think...

My cursor often becomes stuck on the pan (10.3) or the rotate (Pro) tool. No matter what I try, I'm not able to use any other cursor functions. Sometimes a full computer restart fixes this issue, but not always. No key command or escape key command fixes this issue.

After a few minutes of work, the cursor changed to the Zoom Out tool (I didn't notice when; I may have done it). It will not change to Zoom In or Pan when I select one of them from the Tools toolbar. I can zoom in if I hold down Z, but the cursor changes back to Zoom Out when I let the key go.

But for things like "oh yes, 644, why did I even ask" it's a lot more efficient to ask the AI inside cursor and not Google. From my first month of using cursor I'm a little shocked how much I am using it and how much I must have been googling before ?

I can imagine there is a good reason for it not being part of the undo command. But if there was a shortcut or button to press after I accidentally place the 3D cursor for the hundredth time, that would be awesome.

EG I have a selection of vertices and need the cursor on a specific vertice using it as pivot. Now I select the vertice and use cursor to selected. Then I use the undo to get my selection and do my operation.

I see that this is an old thread but I am having a similar issue with the cursor in Archicad 25. In the Project Map window (ground floor) - I can neither select the imported image with the Arrow tool, nor with the Marquee tool. The cursor turns into a cloud cursor or if it's an arrow cursor doesn't select the image at all and thus I am unable to rescale it.

Has anyone else had this problem? Basically, I'll be taking a screen recording in Replay and selecting different tabs/options in this video. However, when I view the screen recording in Replay. my cursor in the video is much higher than it should be.

For context, if this was an Excel spreadsheet, my cursor in the video would be 3-4 rows higher than the row that is selected. So I end up with something selected and a cursor that doesn't match the position of the selected item. I want this to be professional and straightforward for the learner, so how do I fix this? 0852c4b9a8

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