Before you synthesize and send custom events, understand how the UI Toolkit event system allocates and sends operating system events.
UI Toolkit sends 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
See in Glossary through the panel. If an event has no target, it’s sent to the root element of the panel. To have a propagation path, an element must have a target, and the sender must set that target in advance. Some event types don’t need a target. For example, keyboard events are sent to the focused element, and pointer events are sent to the element under the pointer.
The event system uses a pool of events to avoid allocating event objects repeatedly.
To synthesize and send your own events:
using
block to ensure it’s returned to the event pool.panel.visualTree.SendEvent()
.You can send operating system events, such as keyboard and pointer events. To do so, use a UnityEngine.Event
to initialize the UI(User Interface) Allows a user to interact with your application. Unity currently supports three UI systems. More info
See in Glossary Toolkit event.
The following example demonstrates how to synthesize and send events:
void SynthesizeAndSendKeyDownEvent(IPanel panel, KeyCode code,
char character = '\0', EventModifiers modifiers = EventModifiers.None)
{
// Create a UnityEngine.Event to hold initialization data.
var evt = new Event() {
type = EventType.KeyDownEvent,
keyCode = code,
character = character,
modifiers = modifiers
};
using (KeyDownEvent keyDownEvent = KeyDownEvent.GetPooled(evt))
{
panel.visualTree.SendEvent(keyDownEvent);
}
}
Important: Don’t send events that are from outside the operating system or aren’t present in the UnityEngine.Event
types. UI Toolkit sends some events as a reaction to internal state changes. External processes must not send those events. For example, if you send PointerCaptureEvent
, visual elements assume that the underlying conditions for that event are met and won’t set pointer capture for them. This might break the internal configurations of the visual element and cause undefined behaviors.