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I am working on iMX51 project. The RTOS is WINCE 6.0 r3. And I am using iMX51 freescale evaluation kit.

We are actually looking to speed up the GDI and to implement the hardware cursor.

I am unclear abt the following:-

  1. What exactly does speed up of GDI & Hardware cursor means?

  2. Also What is the difference b/w software & hardware cursors?

Note: When I reboot the hardware after building my workspace, I see the mouse cursor located at the centre of the window. Can anyone guide me what type of cursor is this? Is this a hardware cursor or software cursor...? And if this is a hardware cursor then:----

  1. How should I eliminate the software cursor ?
  2. What should I do to implement the hardware cursor?
  3. And why should I do this?
  4. And on which module I should look to achieve the target?

Referring:

  • WC600_MX51_SDK_0912_ReferenceManual.pdf
  • MCIMX51RM.pdf

Please guide me the correct step to how to achieve my target.

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    Please note, this question has nothing to do with C and C++, which is why I removed the tags. Why did you reinstate them?
    – anon
    Mar 25, 2010 at 11:01
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    Why not include Delphi, assembler, FORTH and any other language that "might" be used? I don't want to get into an edit war on this but please remove those tags.
    – anon
    Mar 25, 2010 at 11:23
  • @anon Because sometimes people get pissy if you don't include the language you're working the question in. And some people get pissy when you do...
    – Ian Boyd
    Nov 11, 2011 at 15:23

1 Answer 1

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The cursor is simply the mouse pointer. Having a hardware cursor means that the graphics hardware can "overlay" a small moving image (often called a "sprite") on top of the regular graphics, by itself.

Implementing a software cursor means storing the background "below" the pointer, and re-writing that when the pointer moves. It can be tricky, especially when the underlying graphics is changing.

UPDATE: From a quick glance at the reference manual, you need to read up on the display processor (DP) module. The register DP_COC_SYNC seems to be concerned with setting up the cursor mode, while DP_CUR_POS_SYNC sets its position on-screen.

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    @abhi - we have no way to know. You have to look at your display driver source code and see which it's using.
    – ctacke
    Mar 25, 2010 at 11:24

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