Version: Unity 6 Preview (6000.0)
Language : English
Control behavior with events
Capture the pointer with a manipulator

Dispatch events

The event systemA way of sending events to objects in the application based on input, be it keyboard, mouse, touch, or custom input. The Event System consists of a few components that work together to send events. More info
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listens for events that come from the operating system or scriptsA piece of code that allows you to create your own Components, trigger game events, modify Component properties over time and respond to user input in any way you like. More info
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, then uses the EventDispatcher to dispatch those events to visual elementsA node of a visual tree that instantiates or derives from the C# VisualElement class. You can style the look, define the behaviour, and display it on screen as part of the UI. More info
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. The event dispatcher determines an appropriate dispatching strategy for each event it sends. Once determined, the dispatcher executes the strategy.

Visual elements implement default behaviors for several events. This involves the creation and execution of additional events. For example, a PointerMoveEvent can generate an additional PointerEnterEvent and a PointerLeaveEvent. These events enter a queue and process after the current event. For example, the PointerMoveEvent finishes processing before the PointerEnterEvent and PointerLeaveEvent events.

Dispatch behavior of event types

Each event type has its own dispatch behavior. The behavior of each event type breaks down into two stages:

  • Trickles down: Events sent to elements during the trickle-down phase.
  • Bubbles up: Events sent to elements during the bubble-up phase.

For a list of dispatch behavior for each event type, see the Event reference page.

Event propagation

After the event dispatcher selects the event target, it computes the propagation path of the event. The propagation path is an ordered list of visual elements that receive the event. The propagation path occurs in the following order:

  1. The path starts at the root of the visual element tree and descends towards the target. This is the trickle-down phase.
  2. The event target receives the event.
  3. The event then ascends the tree towards the root. This is the bubble-up phase.
Propagation path
Propagation path

Most event types are sent to all elements along the propagation path. Some event types skip the bubble-up phase, and some event types are sent to the event target only.

If you hide or disable an element, it won’t receive events. Events still propagate to the ancestors and descendants of a hidden or disabled element.

Event target

As an event travels along the propagation path, Event.currentTarget updates to the element handling the event. Within an event callback function, there are two properties that log the dispatch behavior:

The target of an event depends on the event type. For pointer events, the target is most commonly the topmost pickable element, directly under the pointer. For keyboard events, the target is the element that has focus.

UI Toolkit events have a target property that contains a reference to the element where the event occurred. For most events that originate from the operating system, the dispatch process finds the event target automatically.

The target element is stored in EventBase.target and doesn’t change during the dispatch process. The property Event.currentTarget updates to the visual element currently handling the event.

Picking mode and custom shapes

Most pointer events use the picking mode to decide their target. The VisualElement class has a pickingMode property that supports the following values:

You can override the VisualElement.ContainsPoint() method to perform custom intersection logic.

Additional resources

Control behavior with events
Capture the pointer with a manipulator