int GetCursorAttribute (int panelHandle, int controlID, int cursorNumber, int cursorAttribute, int *attributeValue);
Obtains one of the following graph cursor attributes:
ATTR_CURSOR_MODE
ATTR_CURSOR_POINT_STYLE
ATTR_CROSS_HAIR_STYLE
ATTR_CURSOR_COLOR
ATTR_CURSOR_XAXIS (bottom or top)
ATTR_CURSOR_YAXIS (left or right)
Input | ||
Name | Type | Description |
panelHandle | integer | Specifier for a particular panel that is currently in memory. You obtain this handle from LoadPanel, NewPanel, or DuplicatePanel. |
controlID | integer | The defined constant, located in the .uir header file, that you assigned to the control in the User Interface Editor, or the ID returned by NewCtrl or DuplicateCtrl. |
cursorNumber | integer | Identifies the cursor. cursorNumber can range from 1 to the number of defined cursors for the specified graph. You can set the number of defined cursors when you edit the graph in the User Interface Editor or through SetCtrlAttribute. |
cursorAttribute | integer | The cursor attribute value to obtain. In the function panel, when you click the control or press <Enter>, <Spacebar>, or <Ctrl-down arrow>, a dialog box appears containing a hierarchical list of the available attributes. Attributes whose values cannot be obtained are dimmed. Help text is shown for each attribute. To select an attribute, double-click it or select it and then press <Enter>. If the attribute shown in this ring control has named constants as valid values, you can open a list of them by moving to the Attribute Value control and pressing <Enter>. The Attribute Values dialog box displays the values and value help for the constants. |
Output | ||
Name | Type | Description |
attributeValue | integer | The value of the specified cursor attribute. If the attribute shown in this control has named constants as valid values, you can open a list of them by pressing <Enter>. The Attribute Values dialog box displays the values and value help for the constants. |
Name | Type | Description | ||||
status | integer | Return value indicating whether the function was successful. A negative number indicates that an error occurred.
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