That function should allow you to set the cursor to None. I will fix this
in the next release.
James.
--
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
WWW: http://www.daa.com.au/~james/
On Wed, 18 Aug 1999, Mitch Chapman wrote:
> J.W. Bizzaro wrote:
> >
> > Mitch Chapman wrote:
> > >
> > > Is there an easy way to temporarily display a busy cursor over
> > > a window?
> > > ...I can't figure out how to restore the previous cursor on
> > > the window, or even how to find out what the previous cursor is.
> >
> > I haven't tried it, but this would be my guess:
> >
> > widget.get_window().set_cursor(None)
>
> Alas, no joy:
>
> Traceback (innermost last):
> File "/usr/local/lib/python1.5/site-packages/gtk.py", line 114, in
> __call__
> ret = apply(self.func, a)
> File "<stdin>", line 96, in enterTextCB
> File "<stdin>", line 58, in run
> TypeError: GdkWindow.set_cursor, argument 1: expected GdkCursor, None
> found
>
>
> And I can't pass a None to gtk.cursor_new(), either:
>
> Traceback (innermost last):
> File "/usr/local/lib/python1.5/site-packages/gtk.py", line 114, in
> __call__
> ret = apply(self.func, a)
> File "<stdin>", line 97, in enterTextCB
> File "<stdin>", line 58, in run
> File "/usr/local/lib/python1.5/site-packages/gtk.py", line 2495, in
> cursor_new
> return _gtk.gdk_cursor_new(type)
> TypeError: enum values must be integers or strings
>
>
> --
> Mitch Chapman
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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