On Wed, Jul 06, 2016 at 11:13:03PM +0100, Lisi Reisz
wrote:
> > Use an opaque mouse cursor theme???
[...]
> And where can I find one of those critters,
my dear lady?
[...]
When you find a nice one, let me know what it is.
Obviously somebody has created these mouse cursors, and they probably
didn't do it by typing a series of zeroes and ones into a file. Is there
a standard "cursor editor" software application? Or at least a standard
way to create a cursor theme?
Back in Ancient Days, when dinosaurs roamed the earth and I used an
Apple Macintosh, there was an Apple product called "Resedit". It was a
marvel, created for the Apple developers themselves, and then passed
around to non-Apple developers. It let you open up all sorts of
applications and other binary files and edit their internal resources,
such as menu names, error message strings, icons and cursors. Apart from
the four standard Apple cursors which were baked into ROM (the arrow,
wristwatch, crosshairs and fat cross), you could edit any cursor using a
simple point-and-click interface.
Given that the state of computing is now about 30 years more advanced
than when Resedit came out, I wonder whether there is a cursor editor
around somewhere? I found this link:
http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-software-2/cursor-editor-2835
32/
but like many tech threads, it follows the "how to make muffins" school
of thought:
HOW TO MAKE MUFFINS
To make muffins, you will need flour. Flour is the ground up grain
of the plants Triticum aestivum, Triticum durum or Oryza sativa.
You can purchase flour from a supermarket or grocery store in
exchange for money, which is typically made from paper or gold.
Prepare to cook your muffins by turning your oven on and letting
it pre-heat to 380°F or 210°C. In a large bowl, mix the flour, sugar,
baking soda, salt, blueberries, eggs, oil, milk or water. Put the
mixture in the oven.
Now you have muffins!
Steve, that is wonderful! I shall share it - I hope you don't mind. :-?
Lisi