This event class contains information about key press and release events.
The main information carried by this event is the key being pressed or released. It can be accessed using either GetKeyCode
function or GetUnicodeKey
. For the printable characters, the latter should be used as it works for any keys, including non-Latin-1 characters that can be entered when using national keyboard layouts. GetKeyCode
should be used to handle special characters (such as cursor arrows keys or HOME
or INS
and so on) which correspond to wx.KeyCode enum elements above the WXK_START
constant. While GetKeyCode
also returns the character code for Latin-1 keys for compatibility, it doesn’t work for Unicode characters in general and will return WXK_NONE
for any non-Latin-1 ones. For this reason, it’s recommended to always use GetUnicodeKey
and only fall back to GetKeyCode
if GetUnicodeKey
returned WXK_NONE
meaning that the event corresponds to a non-printable special keys.
While both of these functions can be used with the events of wxEVT_KEY_DOWN
, wxEVT_KEY_UP
and wxEVT_CHAR
types, the values returned by them are different for the first two events and the last one. For the latter, the key returned corresponds to the character that would appear in e.g. a text zone if the user pressed the key in it. As such, its value depends on the current state of the Shift key and, for the letters, on the state of Caps Lock modifier. For example, if A
key is pressed without Shift being held down, wx.KeyEvent of type wxEVT_CHAR
generated for this key press will return (from either GetKeyCode
or GetUnicodeKey
as their meanings coincide for ASCII
characters) key code of 97 corresponding the ASCII
value of a
. And if the same key is pressed but with Shift being held (or Caps Lock being active), then the key could would be 65, i.e. ASCII
value of capital A
.
However for the key down and up events the returned key code will instead be A
independently of the state of the modifier keys i.e. it depends only on physical key being pressed and is not translated to its logical representation using the current keyboard state. Such untranslated key codes are defined as follows:
7
or +
), the untranslated key code corresponds to the character produced by the key when it is pressed without Shift. E.g. in standard US
keyboard layout the untranslated key code for the key =/+
in the upper right corner of the keyboard is 61 which is the ASCII
value of =
.Notice that the first rule applies to all Unicode letters, not just the usual Latin-1 ones. However for non-Latin-1 letters only GetUnicodeKey
can be used to retrieve the key code as GetKeyCode
just returns WXK_NONE
in this case.
To summarize: you should handle wxEVT_CHAR
if you need the translated key and wxEVT_KEY_DOWN
if you only need the value of the key itself, independent of the current keyboard state.
Another difference between key and int events is that another kind of translation is done for the latter ones when the Control key is pressed: int events for ASCII
letters in this case carry codes corresponding to the ASCII
value of Ctrl-Latter, i.e. 1 for Ctrl-A, 2 for Ctrl-B and so on until 26 for Ctrl-Z. This is convenient for terminal-like applications and can be completely ignored by all the other ones (if you need to handle Ctrl-A it is probably a better idea to use the key event rather than the int one). Notice that currently no translation is done for the presses of \
, ^
and _
keys which might be mapped to ASCII
values from 27 to 31. Since version 2.9.2, the enum values WXK_CONTROL_A
- WXK_CONTROL_Z
can be used instead of the non-descriptive constant values 1-26
.
Finally, modifier keys only generate key events but no int events at all. The modifiers keys are WXK_SHIFT
, WXK_CONTROL
, WXK_ALT
and various WXK_WINDOWS_XXX
from wx.KeyCode enum.
Modifier keys events are special in one additional aspect: usually the keyboard state associated with a key press is well defined, e.g. wx.KeyboardState.ShiftDown
returns true
only if the Shift key was held pressed when the key that generated this event itself was pressed. There is an ambiguity for the key press events for Shift key itself however. By convention, it is considered to be already pressed when it is pressed and already released when it is released. In other words, wxEVT_KEY_DOWN
event for the Shift key itself will have MOD_SHIFT
in GetModifiers
and ShiftDown
will return True
while the wxEVT_KEY_UP
event for Shift itself will not have MOD_SHIFT
in its modifiers and ShiftDown
will return False
.
Tip: You may discover the key codes and modifiers generated by all the keys on your system interactively by running the Key Event Sample wxWidgets sample and pressing some keys in it.
Handlers bound for the following event types will receive a wx.KeyEvent parameter.
wxEVT_KEY_DOWN
event (any key has been pressed). If this event is handled and not skipped, wxEVT_CHAR
will not be generated at all for this key press (but wxEVT_KEY_UP
will be).wxEVT_KEY_UP
event (any key has been released).wxEVT_CHAR
event.wxEVT_CHAR_HOOK
event. Unlike all the other key events, this event is propagated upwards the window hierarchy which allows intercepting it in the parent window of the focused window to which it is sent initially (if there is no focused window, this event is sent to the wx.App global object). It is also generated before any other key events and so gives the parent window an opportunity to modify the keyboard handling of its children, e.g. it is used internally by wxWidgets in some ports to intercept pressing Esc key in any child of a dialog to close the dialog itself when it’s pressed. By default, if this event is handled, i.e. the handler doesn’t call wx.Event.Skip
, neither wxEVT_KEY_DOWN
nor wxEVT_CHAR
events will be generated (although wxEVT_KEY_UP
still will be), i.e. it replaces the normal key events. However by calling the special DoAllowNextEvent
method you can handle wxEVT_CHAR_HOOK
and still allow normal events generation. This is something that is rarely useful but can be required if you need to prevent a parent wxEVT_CHAR_HOOK
handler from running without suppressing the normal key events. Finally notice that this event is not generated when the mouse is captured as it is considered that the window which has the capture should receive all the keyboard events too without allowing its parent wx.TopLevelWindow to interfere with their processing.Note
Not all key down events may be generated by the user. As an example, wxEVT_KEY_DOWN
with =
key code can be generated using the standard US
keyboard layout but not using the German one because the =
key corresponds to Shift-0 key combination in this layout and the key code for it is 0
, not =
. Because of this you should avoid requiring your users to type key events that might be impossible to enter on their keyboard.
Note
If a key down ( EVT_KEY_DOWN
) event is caught and the event handler does not call event.Skip()
then the corresponding int event ( EVT_CHAR
) will not happen. This is by design and enables the programs that handle both types of events to avoid processing the same key twice. As a consequence, if you do not want to suppress the wxEVT_CHAR
events for the keys you handle, always call event.Skip()
in your wxEVT_KEY_DOWN
handler. Not doing may also prevent accelerators defined using this key from working.
Note
If a key is maintained in a pressed state, you will typically get a lot of (automatically generated) key down events but only one key up one at the end when the key is released so it is wrong to assume that there is one up event corresponding to each down one.
Note
For Windows programmers: The key and int events in wxWidgets are similar to but slightly different from Windows WM_KEYDOWN
and WM_CHAR
events. In particular, Alt-x combination will generate a int event in wxWidgets (unless it is used as an accelerator) and almost all keys, including ones without ASCII
equivalents, generate int events too.
See also
__init__ |
Constructor. |
DoAllowNextEvent |
Allow normal key events generation. |
GetKeyCode |
Returns the key code of the key that generated this event. |
GetPosition |
Obtains the position (in client coordinates) at which the key was pressed. |
GetRawKeyCode |
Returns the raw key code for this event. |
GetRawKeyFlags |
Returns the low level key flags for this event. |
GetUnicodeKey |
Returns the Unicode character corresponding to this key event. |
GetX |
Returns the X position (in client coordinates) of the event. |
GetY |
Returns the Y position (in client coordinates) of the event. |
IsKeyInCategory |
Returns True if the key is in the given key category. |
IsNextEventAllowed |
Returns True if DoAllowNextEvent had been called, False by default. |
KeyCode |
See GetKeyCode |
Position |
See GetPosition |
RawKeyCode |
See GetRawKeyCode |
RawKeyFlags |
See GetRawKeyFlags |
UnicodeKey |
See GetUnicodeKey |
X |
See GetX |
Y |
See GetY |
wx.
KeyEvent
(Event, KeyboardState)¶Possible constructors:
KeyEvent(keyEventType=wxEVT_NULL)
This event class contains information about key press and release events.
__init__
(self, keyEventType=wxEVT_NULL)¶Constructor.
Currently, the only valid event types are wxEVT_CHAR
and wxEVT_CHAR_HOOK
.
Parameters: | keyEventType (wx.EventType) – |
---|
DoAllowNextEvent
(self)¶Allow normal key events generation.
Can be called from wxEVT_CHAR_HOOK
handler to indicate that the generation of normal events should not be suppressed, as it happens by default when this event is handled.
The intended use of this method is to allow some window object to prevent wxEVT_CHAR_HOOK
handler in its parent window from running by defining its own handler for this event. Without calling this method, this would result in not generating wxEVT_KEY_DOWN
nor wxEVT_CHAR
events at all but by calling it you can ensure that these events would still be generated, even if wxEVT_CHAR_HOOK
event was handled.
New in version 2.9.3.
GetKeyCode
(self)¶Returns the key code of the key that generated this event.
ASCII
symbols return normal ASCII
values, while events from special keys such as “left cursor arrow” ( WXK_LEFT
) return values outside of the ASCII
range. See wx.KeyCode for a full list of the virtual key codes.
Note that this method returns a meaningful value only for special non-alphanumeric keys or if the user entered a Latin-1 character (this includes ASCII
and the accented letters found in Western European languages but not letters of other alphabets such as e.g. Cyrillic). Otherwise it simply method returns WXK_NONE
and GetUnicodeKey
should be used to obtain the corresponding Unicode character.
Using GetUnicodeKey
is in general the right thing to do if you are interested in the characters typed by the user, GetKeyCode
should be only used for special keys (for which GetUnicodeKey
returns WXK_NONE
). To handle both kinds of keys you might write:
def OnChar(self, event):
keycode = event.GetUnicodeKey()
if keycode != wx.WXK_NONE:
# It's a printable character
wx.LogMessage("You pressed '%c'"%keycode)
else:
# It's a special key, deal with all the known ones:
if keycode in [wx.WXK_LEFT, wx.WXK_RIGHT]:
# move cursor ...
MoveCursor()
elif keycode == wx.WXK_F1:
# give help ...
GiveHelp()
Return type: | int |
---|
GetPosition
(self)¶Obtains the position (in client coordinates) at which the key was pressed.
Notice that under most platforms this position is simply the current mouse pointer position and has no special relationship to the key event itself.
x and y may be None
if the corresponding coordinate is not needed.
Return type: | wx.Point |
---|
GetRawKeyCode
(self)¶Returns the raw key code for this event.
The flags are platform-dependent and should only be used if the functionality provided by other wx.KeyEvent methods is insufficient.
Under MSW, the raw key code is the value of wParam
parameter of the corresponding message.
Under GTK, the raw key code is the keyval
field of the corresponding GDK
event.
Under OS X, the raw key code is the keyCode
field of the corresponding NSEvent.
Return type: | wx.int |
---|
Note
Currently the raw key codes are not supported by all ports, use #ifdef HAS_RAW_KEY_CODES
to determine if this feature is available.
GetRawKeyFlags
(self)¶Returns the low level key flags for this event.
The flags are platform-dependent and should only be used if the functionality provided by other wx.KeyEvent methods is insufficient.
Under MSW, the raw flags are just the value of lParam
parameter of the corresponding message.
Under GTK, the raw flags contain the hardware_keycode
field of the corresponding GDK
event.
Under OS X, the raw flags contain the modifiers state.
Return type: | wx.int |
---|
Note
Currently the raw key flags are not supported by all ports, use #ifdef HAS_RAW_KEY_CODES
to determine if this feature is available.
GetUnicodeKey
(self)¶Returns the Unicode character corresponding to this key event.
If the key pressed doesn’t have any character value (e.g. a cursor key) this method will return WXK_NONE
. In this case you should use GetKeyCode
to retrieve the value of the key.
This function is only available in Unicode build, i.e. when USE_UNICODE
is 1.
Return type: | int |
---|
GetX
(self)¶Returns the X position (in client coordinates) of the event.
Return type: | wx.Coord |
---|
See also
GetY
(self)¶Returns the Y position (in client coordinates) of the event.
Return type: | wx.Coord |
---|
See also
IsKeyInCategory
(self, category)¶Returns True
if the key is in the given key category.
Parameters: | category (int) – A bitwise combination of named wx.KeyCategoryFlags constants. |
---|---|
Return type: | bool |
New in version 2.9.1.
IsNextEventAllowed
(self)¶Returns True
if DoAllowNextEvent
had been called, False
by default.
This method is used by wxWidgets itself to determine whether the normal key events should be generated after wxEVT_CHAR_HOOK
processing.
Return type: | bool |
---|
New in version 2.9.3.
KeyCode
¶See GetKeyCode
Position
¶See GetPosition
RawKeyCode
¶See GetRawKeyCode
RawKeyFlags
¶See GetRawKeyFlags
UnicodeKey
¶See GetUnicodeKey