The click event fires when the user clicks an element with the left button of the mouse.
The filedrop event fires when the user drops a file over the element.
The
globalclick event fires when the user clicks anywhere.
Note that this fires for all mouse buttons.
You can check the specific variant with the
MouseData’s
trigger_button property.
The onglobalfilehover event fires when the user hovers a file over the window.
The
onglobalfilehovercancelled event fires when the user cancels the hovering of a file over the window. It’s the opposite of
onglobalfilehover.
The
globalmousedown event fires when the user starts clicking anywhere.
Note that this fires for all mouse buttons.
You can check the specific variant with the
MouseData’s
trigger_button property.
The globalmouseover event fires when the user moves the mouse anywhere in the app.
The globalpointerup event fires when the user releases the point anywhere in the app.
The keydown event fires when the user starts pressing any key.
The keyup event fires when the user releases any key being pressed.
The click event fires when the user clicks an element with the middle button of the mouse.
The
mousedown event fires when the user starts clicking an element.
Note that this fires for all mouse buttons.
You can check the specific variant with the
MouseData’s
trigger_button property.
The mouseenter event fires when the user starts hovering an element.
The mouseleave event fires when the user stops hovering an element.
The
mouseover event fires when the user moves the mouse over an element.
Unlike
onmouseover, this fires even if the user was already hovering over
the element. For that reason, it’s less efficient.
The pointerdown event fires when the user clicks/starts touching an element.
The pointerenter event fires when the user starts hovering/touching an element.
The pointerleave event fires when the user stops hovering/touching an element.
The
pointerover event fires when the user hovers/touches over an element.
Unlike
onpointerenter, this fires even if the user was already hovering over
the element. For that reason, it’s less efficient.
The pointerup event fires when the user releases their mouse button or stops touching the element.
The click event fires when the user clicks an element with the right button of the mouse.
The
touchcancel event fires when the user cancels the touching, this is usually caused by the hardware or the OS.
Also see
ontouchend.
The touchend event fires when the user stops touching an element.
The touchmove event fires when the user is touching over an element.
The touchstart event fires when the user starts touching an element.
The wheel event fires when the user scrolls the mouse wheel while hovering over the element.