The table cell or set of cells can be selected.Ĭross cursor, often used to indicate selection in a bitmap. Sometimes an image of an hourglass or a watch. The program is busy, and the user can't interact with the interface (in contrast to progress). With the interface (in contrast to wait).
The program is busy in the background, but the user can still interact The cursor is a pointer that indicates a link. E.g., equivalent to text when hovering text. The UA will determine the cursor to display based on the current context. You can hover your mouse over the table rows to see the effect of the different cursor keyword values on your browser. The available keywords are listed in the table below. 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.Ī keyword value must be specified, indicating either the type of cursor to use, or the fallback cursor to use if all specified icons fail to load. 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. The numbers are in units of image pixels. Optional x- and y-coordinates indicating the cursor hotspot the precise position within the cursor that is being pointed to. More than one url() may be provided as fallbacks, in case some cursor image types are not supported.Ī non-URL fallback (one or more of the keyword values) must be at the end of the fallback list. ValuesĪ url(…) or a comma separated list url(…), url(…), …, pointing 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).Įach may be optionally followed by a pair of space-separated numbers, which set the coordinates of the cursor's hotspot relative to the top-left corner of the image. The cursor property is specified as zero or more values, separated by commas, followed by a single mandatory keyword value. , url (cursor_n.cur ) 5 5, progress /* Global values */ cursor : inherit cursor : initial cursor : revert cursor : unset
If you still need help, perhaps you can paste a screen shot here to demonstrate./* Keyword value */ cursor : auto cursor : pointer Ĭursor : zoom-out /* URL with mandatory keyword fallback */ cursor : url (hand.cur ), pointer /* URL and coordinates, with mandatory keyword fallback */ cursor : url (cursor_1.png ) 4 12, auto cursor : url (cursor_2.png ) 2 2, pointer /* URLs and fallback URLs (some with coordinates), with mandatory keyword fallback */ cursor : url (cursor_1.svg ) 4 5, url (cursor_2.svg ). What I am not so clear about is that once you touch down with the healing brush you can see the extent of your brush strokes, so I might be missing the point. This forces a white cursor that shows quite well - especially against busy backgrounds. With paths one trick is to add a lay and fill it with black, and set the layer's opacity to 50%. I can imagine that can be a problem on high def displays.
This forum covers all versions of the full Photoshop app all the way back when it was first released.Īre you asking about seeing the cursor outline against tones around the 50% grey value? I will say that the cursor is more apparent in this screen shot, than it looked in Photoshop.Īs you know, cursors and paths automatically show as black up to 50% grey, and white beyond 50% grey, and with a one pixel thickness. I couldn't find a discussion group for Photoshop CS6, although the problem also likely affects Elements.