First of all, I'd like to mention that I found that related post How to get the mouse position on the screen in Qt? but it "just didn't work" for me. I made some tests, and the results didn't work as I expected, so I decided to make a new post to talk about the test I made and to find an alternative solution.
That's the code I used to make the test:
QScreen *screen0 = QApplication::screens().at(0);
QScreen *screen1 = QApplication::screens().at(1);
printf("screen0 %s
", screen0->name().toStdString().c_str());
printf("screen1 %s
", screen1->name().toStdString().c_str());
// Position on first screen.
QPoint pos0 = QCursor::pos(screen0);
// Position on second screen.
QPoint pos1 = QCursor::pos(screen1);
printf("pos 0: %d, %d
", pos0.x(), pos0.y());
printf("pos 1: %d, %d
", pos1.x(), pos1.y());
// Get position without screen.
QPoint pos = QCursor::pos();
printf("pos: %d, %d
", pos.x(), pos.y());
What I was expecting, is that only one screen would return a valid position, since the cursor is only at one screen, not on both. But it's not the case, the both positions (pos0
and pos1
) has the exactly same value, as we can see on the output:
screen0 DVI-D-0
screen1 HDMI-0
pos 0: 1904, 1178
pos 1: 1904, 1178
pos: 1904, 1178
Since the both positions has the same values, I can't know at which screen is the cursor. I don't know if that's a normal behavior or a bug, since the documentation doesn't say what happens when the screen argument isn't the screen where the mouse is.
My idea, is to open/launch an application (executed by a Qt daemon that must detect the selected screen) to the screen where the mouse is. I know that with libX11 it's possible, because I did it in the past, but I need to work with Qt 5, and I can't figure out how to do detect the selected screen with Qt.
I also made other tests, using QApplication
and QDesktopWidget
classes with no luck.
See Question&Answers more detail:
os