Mouse Up Event
Installed With: Full Development System
Class: Splitter Events
Type: Notify
Generated when you release the mouse button on a splitter bar. LabVIEW does not generate this event if a shortcut menu appears when you click the mouse button.
Event Data Fields
Name | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|
Source | Source of the event. LabVIEW UI refers to any built-in user interface event.
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Type | Type of event that occurred, such as Mouse Down, Value Change, Timeout, and so on. | ||
Time | Value of the millisecond timer when the event occurred. | ||
SplitterRef | Returns a reference to the splitter on which the event occurred. | ||
Coords | Coordinates of the mouse at the location of the mouse click at the time of the event. Coordinates are relative to the upper left corner of the front panel. | ||
Button | Value that corresponds to which mouse button the user clicked. Left mouse button is 1, right mouse button is 2. Operating systems might assign higher numbers if you have a mouse with more than two buttons. For filter events, you can modify the data returned by this event data field. | ||
Mods | Cluster of Booleans that contain platform-independent modifiers. LabVIEW returns all platform-dependent modifiers in the PlatMods event data field. For key events, this event returns a Boolean indicating if the event occurred on the numeric keypad. For mouse events, this event returns a Boolean indicating if the event was a double-click. For both events, a Boolean is returned if the platform-independent menu key, such as <Ctrl> on Windows or <Command> on Mac OS, was pressed when the event occurred. For filter events, you can modify the data returned by this event data field. | ||
PlatMods | Cluster of Booleans that contain platform-dependent modifiers. Specifies if platform-dependent keys, such as <Ctrl>, <Shift>, <Alt>, <Command>, and <Option> were held down when the event was triggered. For filter events, you can modify the data returned by this event data field. A key can be both a Mod and PlatMod. For example, <Ctrl> is the platform-independent menu key on Windows, but you also can use it in platform-dependent programming. |