Touch Devices
Android supports a variety of touch screens and touch pads, including stylus-based digitizer tablets.
Touch screens are touch devices that are associated with a display such that the user has the impression of directly manipulating items on screen.
Touch pads are touch devices that are not associated with a display such as a digitizer tablet. Touch pads are typically used for pointing or for absolute indirect positioning or gesture-based control of a user interface.
Touch devices may have buttons whose functions are similar to mouse buttons.
Touch devices can sometimes be manipulated using a variety of different tools such as fingers or a stylus depending on the underlying touch sensor technology.
Touch devices are sometimes used to implement virtual keys. For example, on some Android devices, the touch screen sensor area extends beyond the edge of the display and serves dual purpose as part of a touch sensitive key pad.
Due to the great variety of touch devices, Android relies on a large number of configuration properties to describe the characteristics and desired behavior of each device.
Touch Device Classification
An input device is classified as a multi-touch device if both of the following conditions hold:
-
The input device reports the presence of the
ABS_MT_POSITION_X
andABS_MT_POSITION_Y
absolute axes. -
The input device does not have any gamepad buttons. This condition resolves an ambiguity with certain gamepads that report axes with codes that overlaps those of the MT axes.
An input device is classified as a single-touch device if both of the following conditions hold:
-
The input device is not classified as a multi-touch device. An input device is either classified as a single-touch device or as a multi-touch device, never both.
-
The input device reports the presence of the
ABS_X
andABS_Y
absolute axes, and the presence of theBTN_TOUCH
key code.
Once an input device has been classified as a touch device, the presence of virtual keys is determined by attempting to load the virtual key map file for the device. If a virtual key map is available, then the key layout file for the device is also loaded.
Refer to the section below about the location and format of virtual key map files.
Next, the system loads the input device configuration file for the touch device.
All built-in touch devices should have input device configuration files. If no input device configuration file is present, the system will choose a default configuration that is appropriate for typical general-purpose touch peripherals such as external USB or Bluetooth HID touch screens or touch pads. These defaults are not designed for built-in touch screens and will most likely result in incorrect behavior.
After the input device configuration loaded, the system will classify the input device as a touch screen, touch pad or pointer device.
-
A touch screen device is used for direct manipulation of objects on the screen. Since the user is directly touching the screen, the system does not require any additional affordances to indicate the objects being manipulated.
-
A touch pad device is used to provide absolute positioning information to an application about touches on a given sensor area. It may be useful for digitizer tablets.
-
A pointer device is used for indirect manipulation of objects on the screen using a cursor. Fingers are interpreted as multi-touch pointer gestures. Other tools, such as styluses, are interpreted using absolute positions.
See for more information.
The following rules are used to classify the input device as a touch screen, touch pad or pointer device.
-
If the
touch.deviceType
property is set, then the device type will be set as indicated. -
If the input device reports the presence of the
INPUT_PROP_DIRECT
input property (via theEVIOCGPROP
ioctl), then the device type will be set to touch screen. This condition assumes that direct input touch devices are attached to a display that is also connected. -
If the input device reports the presence of the
INPUT_PROP_POINTER
input property (via theEVIOCGPROP
ioctl), then the device type will be set to pointer. -
If the input device reports the presence of the
REL_X
orREL_Y
relative axes, then the device type will be set to touch pad. This condition resolves an ambiguity for input devices that consist of both a mouse and a touch pad. In this case, the touch pad will not be used to control the pointer because the mouse already controls it. -
Otherwise, the device type will be set to pointer. This default ensures that touch pads that have not been designated any other special purpose will serve to control the pointer.
Buttons
Buttons are optional controls that may be used by applications to perform additional functions. Buttons on touch devices behave similarly to mouse buttons and are mainly of use with pointer type touch devices or with a stylus.
The following buttons are supported:
-
BTN_LEFT
: mapped toMotionEvent.BUTTON_PRIMARY
. -
BTN_RIGHT
: mapped toMotionEvent.BUTTON_SECONDARY
. -
BTN_MIDDLE
: mapped toMotionEvent.BUTTON_MIDDLE
. -
BTN_BACK
andBTN_SIDE
: mapped toMotionEvent.BUTTON_BACK
. Pressing this button also synthesizes a key press with the key codeKeyEvent.KEYCODE_BACK
. -
BTN_FORWARD
andBTN_EXTRA
: mapped toMotionEvent.BUTTON_FORWARD
. Pressing this button also synthesizes a key press with the key codeKeyEvent.KEYCODE_FORWARD
. -
BTN_STYLUS
: mapped toMotionEvent.BUTTON_SECONDARY
. -
BTN_STYLUS2
: mapped toMotionEvent.BUTTON_TERTIARY
.
Tools and Tool Types
A tool is a finger, stylus or other apparatus that is used to interact with the touch device. Some touch devices can distinguish between different types of tools.
Elsewhere in Android, as in the MotionEvent
API, a tool is often referred to as a pointer.
The following tool types are supported:
-
BTN_TOOL_FINGER
andMT_TOOL_FINGER
: mapped toMotionEvent.TOOL_TYPE_FINGER
. -
BTN_TOOL_PEN
andMT_TOOL_PEN
: mapped toMotionEvent.TOOL_TYPE_STYLUS
. -
BTN_TOOL_RUBBER
: mapped toMotionEvent.TOOL_TYPE_ERASER
. -
BTN_TOOL_BRUSH
: mapped toMotionEvent.TOOL_TYPE_STYLUS
. -
BTN_TOOL_PENCIL
: mapped toMotionEvent.TOOL_TYPE_STYLUS
. -
BTN_TOOL_AIRBRUSH
: mapped toMotionEvent.TOOL_TYPE_STYLUS
. -
BTN_TOOL_MOUSE
: mapped toMotionEvent.TOOL_TYPE_MOUSE
. -
BTN_TOOL_LENS
: mapped toMotionEvent.TOOL_TYPE_MOUSE
. -
BTN_TOOL_DOUBLETAP
,BTN_TOOL_TRIPLETAP
, andBTN_TOOL_QUADTAP
: mapped toMotionEvent.TOOL_TYPE_FINGER
.
Hovering vs. Touching Tools
Tools can either be in contact with the touch device or in range and hovering above it. Not all touch devices are able to sense the presence of a tool hovering above the touch device. Those that do, such as RF-based stylus digitizers, can often detect when the tool is within a limited range of the digitizer.
The InputReader
component takes care to distinguish touching tools from hovering tools. Likewise, touching tools and hovering tools are reported to applications in different ways.
Touching tools are reported to applications as touch events using MotionEvent.ACTION_DOWN
, MotionEvent.ACTION_MOVE
, MotionEvent.ACTION_DOWN
, MotionEvent.ACTION_POINTER_DOWN
and MotionEvent.ACTION_POINTER_UP
.
Hovering tools are reported to applications as generic motion events using MotionEvent.ACTION_HOVER_ENTER
, MotionEvent.ACTION_HOVER_MOVE
and MotionEvent.ACTION_HOVER_EXIT
.
Touch Device Driver Requirements
-
Touch device drivers should only register axes and key codes for the axes and buttons that they actually support. Registering excess axes or key codes may confuse the device classification algorithm or cause the system to incorrectly detect the capabilities of the device.
For example, if the device reports the
BTN_TOUCH
key code, the system will assume thatBTN_TOUCH
will always be used to indicate whether the tool is actually touching the screen or is merely in range and hovering. -
Single-touch devices use the following Linux input events:
-
ABS_X
: (REQUIRED) Reports the X coordinate of the tool. -
ABS_Y
: (REQUIRED) Reports the Y coordinate of the tool. -
ABS_PRESSURE
: (optional) Reports the physical pressure applied to the tip of the tool or the signal strength of the touch contact. -
ABS_TOOL_WIDTH
: (optional) Reports the cross-sectional area or width of the touch contact or of the tool itself. -
ABS_DISTANCE
: (optional) Reports the distance of the tool from the surface of the touch device. -
ABS_TILT_X
: (optional) Reports the tilt of the tool from the surface of the touch device along the X axis. -
ABS_TILT_Y
: (optional) Reports the tilt of the tool from the surface of the touch device along the Y axis. -
BTN_TOUCH
: (REQUIRED) Indicates whether the tool is touching the device. -
BTN_LEFT
,BTN_RIGHT
,BTN_MIDDLE
,BTN_BACK
,BTN_SIDE
,BTN_FORWARD
,BTN_EXTRA
,BTN_STYLUS
,BTN_STYLUS2
: (optional) Reports states. -
BTN_TOOL_FINGER
,BTN_TOOL_PEN
,BTN_TOOL_RUBBER
,BTN_TOOL_BRUSH
,BTN_TOOL_PENCIL
,BTN_TOOL_AIRBRUSH
,BTN_TOOL_MOUSE
,BTN_TOOL_LENS
,BTN_TOOL_DOUBLETAP
,BTN_TOOL_TRIPLETAP
,BTN_TOOL_QUADTAP
: (optional) Reports the .
-
-
Multi-touch devices use the following Linux input events:
-
ABS_MT_POSITION_X
: (REQUIRED) Reports the X coordinate of the tool. -
ABS_MT_POSITION_Y
: (REQUIRED) Reports the Y coordinate of the tool. -
ABS_MT_PRESSURE
: (optional) Reports the physical pressure applied to the tip of the tool or the signal strength of the touch contact. -
ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR
: (optional) Reports the cross-sectional area of the touch contact, or the length of the longer dimension of the touch contact. -
ABS_MT_TOUCH_MINOR
: (optional) Reports the length of the shorter dimension of the touch contact. This axis should not be used ifABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR
is reporting an area measurement. -
ABS_MT_WIDTH_MAJOR
: (optional) Reports the cross-sectional area of the tool itself, or the length of the longer dimension of the tool itself. This axis should not be used if the dimensions of the tool itself are unknown. -
ABS_MT_WIDTH_MINOR
: (optional) Reports the length of the shorter dimension of the tool itself. This axis should not be used ifABS_MT_WIDTH_MAJOR
is reporting an area measurement or if the dimensions of the tool itself are unknown. -
ABS_MT_ORIENTATION
: (optional) Reports the orientation of the tool. -
ABS_MT_DISTANCE
: (optional) Reports the distance of the tool from the surface of the touch device. -
ABS_MT_TOOL_TYPE
: (optional) Reports the asMT_TOOL_FINGER
orMT_TOOL_PEN
. -
ABS_MT_TRACKING_ID
: (optional) Reports the tracking id of the tool. The tracking id is an arbitrary non-negative integer that is used to identify and track each tool independently when multiple tools are active. For example, when multiple fingers are touching the device, each finger should be assigned a distinct tracking id that is used as long as the finger remains in contact. Tracking ids may be reused when their associated tools move out of range. -
ABS_MT_SLOT
: (optional) Reports the slot id of the tool, when using the Linux multi-touch protocol 'B'. Refer to the Linux multi-touch protocol documentation for more details. -
BTN_TOUCH
: (REQUIRED) Indicates whether the tool is touching the device. -
BTN_LEFT
,BTN_RIGHT
,BTN_MIDDLE
,BTN_BACK
,BTN_SIDE
,BTN_FORWARD
,BTN_EXTRA
,BTN_STYLUS
,BTN_STYLUS2
: (optional) Reports states. -
BTN_TOOL_FINGER
,BTN_TOOL_PEN
,BTN_TOOL_RUBBER
,BTN_TOOL_BRUSH
,BTN_TOOL_PENCIL
,BTN_TOOL_AIRBRUSH
,BTN_TOOL_MOUSE
,BTN_TOOL_LENS
,BTN_TOOL_DOUBLETAP
,BTN_TOOL_TRIPLETAP
,BTN_TOOL_QUADTAP
: (optional) Reports the .
-
-
If axes for both the single-touch and multi-touch protocol are defined, then only the multi-touch axes will be used and the single-touch axes will be ignored.
-
The minimum and maximum values of the
ABS_X
,ABS_Y
,ABS_MT_POSITION_X
andABS_MT_POSITION_Y
axes define the bounds of the active area of the device in device-specific surface units. In the case of a touch screen, the active area describes the part of the touch device that actually covers the display.For a touch screen, the system automatically interpolates the reported touch positions in surface units to obtain touch positions in display pixels according to the following calculation:
displayX = (x - minX) * displayWidth / (maxX - minX + 1) displayY = (y - minY) * displayHeight / (maxY - minY + 1)
A touch screen may report touches outside of the reported active area.
Touches that are initiated outside the active area are not delivered to applications but may be used for virtual keys.
Touches that are initiated inside the active area, or that enter and exit the display area are delivered to applications. Consequently, if a touch starts within the bounds of an application and then moves outside of the active area, the application may receive touch events with display coordinates that are negative or beyond the bounds of the display. This is expected behavior.
A touch device should never clamp touch coordinates to the bounds of the active area. If a touch exits the active area, it should be reported as being outside of the active area, or it should not be reported at all.
For example, if the user's finger is touching near the top-left corner of the touch screen, it may report a coordinate of (minX, minY). If the finger continues to move further outside of the active area, the touch screen should either start reporting coordinates with components less than minX and minY, such as (minX - 2, minY - 3), or it should stop reporting the touch altogether. In other words, the touch screen should not be reporting (minX, minY) when the user's finger is really touching outside of the active area.
Clamping touch coordinates to the display edge creates an artificial hard boundary around the edge of the screen which prevents the system from smoothly tracking motions that enter or exit the bounds of the display area.
-
The values reported by
ABS_PRESSURE
orABS_MT_PRESSURE
, if they are reported at all, must be non-zero when the tool is touching the device and zero otherwise to indicate that the tool is hovering.Reporting pressure information is optional but strongly recommended. Applications can use pressure information to implement pressure-sensitive drawing and other effects.
-
The values reported by
ABS_TOOL_WIDTH
,ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR
,ABS_MT_TOUCH_MINOR
,ABS_MT_WIDTH_MAJOR
, orABS_MT_WIDTH_MINOR
should be non-zero when the tool is touching the device and zero otherwise, but this is not required. For example, the touch device may be able to measure the size of finger touch contacts but not stylus touch contacts.Reporting size information is optional but strongly recommended. Applications can use pressure information to implement size-sensitive drawing and other effects.
-
The values reported by
ABS_DISTANCE
orABS_MT_DISTANCE
should approach zero when the tool is touching the device. The distance may remain non-zero even when the tool is in direct contact. The exact values reported depend on the manner in which the hardware measures distance.Reporting distance information is optional but recommended for stylus devices.
-
The values reported by
ABS_TILT_X
andABS_TILT_Y
should be zero when the tool is perpendicular to the device. A non-zero tilt is taken as an indication that the tool is held at an incline.The tilt angles along the X and Y axes are assumed to be specified in degrees from perpendicular. The center point (perfectly perpendicular) is given by
(max + min) / 2
for each axis. Values smaller than the center point represent a tilt up or to the left, values larger than the center point represent a tilt down or to the right.The
InputReader
converts the X and Y tilt components into a perpendicular tilt angle ranging from 0 toPI / 2
radians and a planar orientation angle ranging from-PI
toPI
radians. This representation results in a description of orientation that is compatible with what is used to describe finger touches.Reporting tilt information is optional but recommended for stylus devices.
-
If the tool type is reported by
ABS_MT_TOOL_TYPE
, it will supersede any tool type information reported byBTN_TOOL_*
. If no tool type information is available at all, the tool type defaults toMotionEvent.TOOL_TYPE_FINGER
. -
A tool is determined to be active based on the following conditions:
-
When using the single-touch protocol, the tool is active if
BTN_TOUCH
, orBTN_TOOL_*
is 1.This condition implies that the
InputReader
needs to have at least some information about the nature of the tool, either whether it is touching, or at least its tool type. If no information is available, then the tool is assumed to be inactive (out of range). -
When using the multi-touch protocol 'A', the tool is active whenever it appears in the most recent sync report. When the tool stops appearing in sync reports, it ceases to exist.
-
When using the multi-touch protocol 'B', the tool is active as long as it has an active slot. When the slot it cleared, the tool ceases to exist.
-
-
A tool is determined to be hovering based on the following conditions:
-
If the tool is
BTN_TOOL_MOUSE
orBTN_TOOL_LENS
, then the tool is not hovering, even if either of the following conditions are true. -
If the tool is active and the driver reports pressure information, and the reported pressure is zero, then the tool is hovering.
-
If the tool is active and the driver supports the
BTN_TOUCH
key code andBTN_TOUCH
has a value of zero, then the tool is hovering.
-
-
The
InputReader
supports both multi-touch protocol 'A' and 'B'. New drivers should use the 'B' protocol but either will work. -
As of Android Ice Cream Sandwich 4.0, touch screen drivers may need to be changed to comply with the Linux input protocol specification.
The following changes may be required:
-
When a tool becomes inactive (finger goes "up"), it should stop appearing in subsequent multi-touch sync reports. When all tools become inactive (all fingers go "up"), the driver should send an empty sync report packet, such as
SYN_MT_REPORT
followed bySYN_REPORT
.Previous versions of Android expected "up" events to be reported by sending a pressure value of 0. The old behavior was incompatible with the Linux input protocol specification and is no longer supported.
-
Physical pressure or signal strength information should be reported using
ABS_MT_PRESSURE
.Previous versions of Android retrieved pressure information from
ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR
. The old behavior was incompatible with the Linux input protocol specification and is no longer supported. -
Touch size information should be reported using
ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR
.Previous versions of Android retrieved size information from
ABS_MT_TOOL_MAJOR
. The old behavior was incompatible with the Linux input protocol specification and is no longer supported.
Touch device drivers no longer need Android-specific customizations. By relying on the standard Linux input protocol, Android can support a wider variety of touch peripherals, such as external HID multi-touch touch screens, using unmodified drivers.
-
Touch Device Operation
The following is a brief summary of the touch device operation on Android.
-
The
EventHub
reads raw events from theevdev
driver. -
The
InputReader
consumes the raw events and updates internal state about the position and other characteristics of each tool. It also tracks button states. -
If the BACK or FORWARD buttons were pressed or released, the
InputReader
notifies theInputDispatcher
about the key event. -
The
InputReader
determines whether a virtual key press occurred. If so, it notifies theInputDispatcher
about the key event. -
The
InputReader
determines whether the touch was initiated within the bounds of the display. If so, it notifies theInputDispatcher
about the touch event. -
If there are no touching tools but there is at least one hovering tool, the
InputReader
notifies theInputDispatcher
about the hover event. -
If the touch device type is pointer, the
InputReader
performs pointer gesture detection, moves the pointer and spots accordingly and notifies theInputDispatcher
about the pointer event. -
The
InputDispatcher
uses theWindowManagerPolicy
to determine whether the events should be dispatched and whether they should wake the device. Then, theInputDispatcher
delivers the events to the appropriate applications.
Touch Device Configuration
Touch device behavior is determined by the device's axes, buttons, input properties, input device configuration, virtual key map and key layout.
Refer to the following sections for more details about the files that participate in keyboard configuration:
Properties
The system relies on many input device configuration properties to configure and calibrate touch device behavior.
One reason for this is that the device drivers for touch devices often report the characteristics of touches using device-specific units.
For example, many touch devices measure the touch contact area using an internal device-specific scale, such as the total number of sensor nodes that were triggered by the touch. This raw size value would not be meaningful applications because they would need to know about the physical size and other characteristics of the touch device sensor nodes.
The system uses calibration parameters encoded in input device configuration files to decode, transform, and normalize the values reported by the touch device into a simpler standard representation that applications can understand.
Documentation Conventions
For documentation purposes, we will use the following conventions to describe the values used by the system during the calibration process.
Raw Axis Values
The following expressions denote the raw values reported by the touch device driver as EV_ABS
events.
- The value of the
ABS_X
orABS_MT_POSITION_X
axis. - The value of the
ABS_Y
orABS_MT_POSITION_Y
axis. - The value of the
ABS_PRESSURE
orABS_MT_PRESSURE
axis, or 0 if not available. - The value of the
ABS_MT_TOUCH_MAJOR
axis, or 0 if not available. - The value of the
ABS_MT_TOUCH_MINOR
axis, orraw.touchMajor
if not available. - The value of the
ABS_TOOL_WIDTH
orABS_MT_WIDTH_MAJOR
axis, or 0 if not available. - The value of the
ABS_MT_WIDTH_MINOR
axis, orraw.toolMajor
if not available. - The value of the
ABS_MT_ORIENTATION
axis, or 0 if not available. - The value of the
ABS_DISTANCE
orABS_MT_DISTANCE
axis, or 0 if not available. - The value of the
ABS_TILT_X
axis, or 0 if not available. - The value of the
ABS_TILT_Y
axis, or 0 if not available.
raw.x
raw.y
raw.pressure
raw.touchMajor
raw.touchMinor
raw.toolMajor
raw.toolMinor
raw.orientation
raw.distance
raw.tiltX
raw.tiltY
Raw Axis Ranges
The following expressions denote the bounds of raw values. They are obtained by calling EVIOCGABS
ioctl for each axis.
- The inclusive minimum value of the raw axis.
- The inclusive maximum value of the raw axis.
- Equivalent to
raw.*.max - raw.*.min
. - The accuracy of the raw axis. eg. fuzz = 1 implies values are accurate to +/- 1 unit.
- The inclusive width of the touch area, equivalent to
raw.x.range + 1
. - The inclusive height of the touch area, equivalent to
raw.y.range + 1
.
raw.*.min
raw.*.max
raw.*.range
raw.*.fuzz
raw.width
raw.height
Output Ranges
The following expressions denote the characteristics of the output coordinate system. The system uses linear interpolation to translate touch position information from the surface units used by the touch device into the output units that will be reported to applications such as display pixels.
- The output width. For touch screens (associated with a display), this is the display width in pixels. For touch pads (not associated with a display), the output width equals
raw.width
, indicating that no interpolation will be performed. - The output height. For touch screens (associated with a display), this is the display height in pixels. For touch pads (not associated with a display), the output height equals
raw.height
, indicating that no interpolation will be performed. - The diagonal length of the output coordinate system, equivalent to
sqrt(output.width ^2 + output.height ^2)
.
output.width
output.height
output.diag
Basic Configuration
The touch input mapper uses many configuration properties in the input device configuration file to specify calibration values. The following table describes some general purpose configuration properties. All other properties are described in the following sections along with the fields they are used to calibrate.
touch.deviceType
Definition: touch.deviceType
= touchScreen
| touchPad
| pointer
| default
Specifies the touch device type.
-
If the value is
touchScreen
, the touch device is a touch screen associated with a display. -
If the value is
touchPad
, the touch device is a touch pad not associated with a display. -
If the value is
pointer
, the touch device is a touch pad not associated with a display, and its motions are used for . -
If the value is
default
, the system automatically detects the device type according to the classification algorithm.
Refer to the section for more details about how the device type influences the behavior of the touch device.
Prior to Honeycomb, all touch devices were assumed to be touch screens.
touch.orientationAware
Definition: touch.orientationAware
= 0
| 1
Specifies whether the touch device should react to display orientation changes.
-
If the value is
1
, touch positions reported by the touch device are rotated whenever the display orientation changes. -
If the value is
0
, touch positions reported by the touch device are immune to display orientation changes.
The default value is 1
if the device is a touch screen, 0
otherwise.
The system distinguishes between internal and external touch screens and displays. An orientation aware internal touch screen is rotated based on the orientation of the internal display. An orientation aware external touch screen is rotated based on the orientation of the external display.
Orientation awareness is used to support rotation of touch screens on devices like the Nexus One. For example, when the device is rotated clockwise 90 degrees from its natural orientation, the absolute positions of touches are remapped such that a touch in the top-left corner of the touch screen's absolute coordinate system is reported as a touch in the top-left corner of the display's rotated coordinate system. This is done so that touches are reported with the same coordinate system that applications use to draw their visual elements.
Prior to Honeycomb, all touch devices were assumed to be orientation aware.
touch.gestureMode
Definition: touch.gestureMode
= pointer
| spots
| default
Specifies the presentation mode for pointer gestures. This configuration property is only relevant when the touch device is of type pointer.
-
If the value is
pointer
, the touch pad gestures are presented by way of a cursor similar to a mouse pointer. -
If the value is
spots
, the touch pad gestures are presented by an anchor that represents the centroid of the gesture and a set of circular spots that represent the position of individual fingers.
The default value is pointer
when the INPUT_PROP_SEMI_MT
input property is set, or spots
otherwise.
X
and Y
Fields
The X and Y fields provide positional information for the center of the contact area.
Calculation
The calculation is straightforward: positional information from the touch driver is linearly interpolated to the output coordinate system.
xScale = output.width / raw.width yScale = output.height / raw.height If not orientation aware or screen rotation is 0 degrees: output.x = (raw.x - raw.x.min) * xScale output.y = (raw.y - raw.y.min) * yScale Else If rotation is 90 degrees: output.x = (raw.y - raw.y.min) * yScale output.y = (raw.x.max - raw.x) * xScale Else If rotation is 180 degrees: output.x = (raw.x.max - raw.x) * xScale output.y = (raw.y.max - raw.y) * yScale Else If rotation is 270 degrees: output.x = (raw.y.max - raw.y) * yScale output.y = (raw.x - raw.x.min) * xScaleEnd If
TouchMajor
, TouchMinor
, ToolMajor
, ToolMinor
, Size
Fields
The TouchMajor
and TouchMinor
fields describe the approximate dimensions of the contact area in output units (pixels).
The ToolMajor
and ToolMinor
fields describe the approximate dimensions of the itself in output units (pixels).
The Size
field describes the normalized size of the touch relative to the largest possible touch that the touch device can sense. The smallest possible normalized size is 0.0 (no contact, or it is unmeasurable), and the largest possible normalized size is 1.0 (sensor area is saturated).
When both the approximate length and breadth can be measured, then the TouchMajor
field specifies the longer dimension and the TouchMinor
field specifies the shorter dimension of the contact area. When only the approximate diameter of the contact area can be measured, then the TouchMajor
and TouchMinor
fields will be equal.
Likewise, the ToolMajor
field specifies the longer dimension and the ToolMinor
field specifies the shorter dimension of the tool's cross-sectional area.
If the touch size is unavailable but the tool size is available, then the tool size will be set equal to the touch size. Conversely, if the tool size is unavailable but the touch size is available, then the touch size will be set equal to the tool size.
Touch devices measure or report the touch size and tool size in various ways. The current implementation supports three different kinds of measurements: diameter, area, and geometric bounding box in surface units.
touch.size.calibration
Definition: touch.size.calibration
= none
| geometric
| diameter
| area
| default
Specifies the kind of measurement used by the touch driver to report the touch size and tool size.
-
If the value is
none
, the size is set to zero. -
If the value is
geometric
, the size is assumed to be specified in the same surface units as the position, so it is scaled in the same manner. -
If the value is
diameter
, the size is assumed to be proportional to the diameter (width) of the touch or tool. -
If the value is
area
, the size is assumed to be proportional to the area of the touch or tool. -
If the value is
default
, the system uses thegeometric
calibration if theraw.touchMajor
orraw.toolMajor
axis is available, otherwise it uses thenone
calibration.
touch.size.scale
Definition: touch.size.scale
= <a non-negative floating point number>
Specifies a constant scale factor used in the calibration.
The default value is 1.0
.
touch.size.bias
Definition: touch.size.bias
= <a non-negative floating point number>
Specifies a constant bias value used in the calibration.
The default value is 0.0
.
touch.size.isSummed
Definition: touch.size.isSummed
= 0
| 1
Specifies whether the size is reported as the sum of the sizes of all active contacts, or is reported individually for each contact.
-
If the value is
1
, the reported size will be divided by the number of contacts prior to use. -
If the value is
0
, the reported size will be used as is.
The default value is 0
.
Some touch devices, particularly "Semi-MT" devices cannot distinguish the individual dimensions of multiple contacts so they report a size measurement that represents their total area or width. This property should only be set to 1
for such devices. If in doubt, set this value to 0
.
Calculation
The calculation of the TouchMajor
, TouchMinor
, ToolMajor
, ToolMinor
and Size
fields depends on the specified calibration parameters.
If raw.touchMajor and raw.toolMajor are available: touchMajor = raw.touchMajor touchMinor = raw.touchMinor toolMajor = raw.toolMajor toolMinor = raw.toolMinor Else If raw.touchMajor is available: toolMajor = touchMajor = raw.touchMajor toolMinor = touchMinor = raw.touchMinor Else If raw.toolMajor is available: touchMajor = toolMajor = raw.toolMajor touchMinor = toolMinor = raw.toolMinor Else touchMajor = toolMajor = 0 touchMinor = toolMinor = 0 size = 0 End If size = avg(touchMajor, touchMinor) If touch.size.isSummed == 1: touchMajor = touchMajor / numberOfActiveContacts touchMinor = touchMinor / numberOfActiveContacts toolMajor = toolMajor / numberOfActiveContacts toolMinor = toolMinor / numberOfActiveContacts size = size / numberOfActiveContacts End If If touch.size.calibration == "none": touchMajor = toolMajor = 0 touchMinor = toolMinor = 0 size = 0 Else If touch.size.calibration == "geometric": outputScale = average(output.width / raw.width, output.height / raw.height) touchMajor = touchMajor * outputScale touchMinor = touchMinor * outputScale toolMajor = toolMajor * outputScale toolMinor = toolMinor * outputScaleElse If touch.size.calibration == "area": touchMajor = sqrt(touchMajor) touchMinor = touchMajor toolMajor = sqrt(toolMajor) toolMinor = toolMajorElse If touch.size.calibration == "diameter": touchMinor = touchMajor toolMinor = toolMajorEnd IfIf touchMajor != 0: output.touchMajor = touchMajor * touch.size.scale + touch.size.biasElse output.touchMajor = 0End IfIf touchMinor != 0: output.touchMinor = touchMinor * touch.size.scale + touch.size.biasElse output.touchMinor = 0End IfIf toolMajor != 0: output.toolMajor = toolMajor * touch.size.scale + touch.size.biasElse output.toolMajor = 0End IfIf toolMinor != 0: output.toolMinor = toolMinor * touch.size.scale + touch.size.biasElse output.toolMinor = 0End Ifoutput.size = size
Pressure
Field
The Pressure
field describes the approximate physical pressure applied to the touch device as a normalized value between 0.0 (no touch) and 1.0 (full force).
A zero pressure indicates that the tool is hovering.
touch.pressure.calibration
Definition: touch.pressure.calibration
= none
| physical
| amplitude
| default
Specifies the kind of measurement used by the touch driver to report the pressure.
-
If the value is
none
, the pressure is unknown so it is set to 1.0 when touching and 0.0 when hovering. -
If the value is
physical
, the pressure axis is assumed to measure the actual physical intensity of pressure applied to the touch pad. -
If the value is
amplitude
, the pressure axis is assumed to measure the signal amplitude, which is related to the size of the contact and the pressure applied. -
If the value is
default
, the system uses thephysical
calibration if the pressure axis available, otherwise usesnone
.
touch.pressure.scale
Definition: touch.pressure.scale
= <a non-negative floating point number>
Specifies a constant scale factor used in the calibration.
The default value is 1.0 / raw.pressure.max
.
Calculation
The calculation of the Pressure
field depends on the specified calibration parameters.
If touch.pressure.calibration == "physical" or "amplitude": output.pressure = raw.pressure * touch.pressure.scale Else If hovering: output.pressure = 0 Else output.pressure = 1 End If End If
Orientation
and Tilt
Fields
The Orientation
field describes the orientation of the touch and tool as an angular measurement. An orientation of 0
indicates that the major axis is oriented vertically, -PI/2
indicates that the major axis is oriented to the left, PI/2
indicates that the major axis is oriented to the right. When a stylus tool is present, the orientation range may be described in a full circle range from -PI
or PI
.
The Tilt
field describes the inclination of the tool as an angular measurement. A tilt of 0
indicates that the tool is perpendicular to the surface. A tilt of PI/2
indicates that the tool is flat on the surface.
touch.orientation.calibration
Definition: touch.orientation.calibration
= none
| interpolated
| vector
| default
Specifies the kind of measurement used by the touch driver to report the orientation.
-
If the value is
none
, the orientation is unknown so it is set to 0. -
If the value is
interpolated
, the orientation is linearly interpolated such that a raw value ofraw.orientation.min
maps to-PI/2
and a raw value ofraw.orientation.max
maps toPI/2
. The center value of(raw.orientation.min + raw.orientation.max) / 2
maps to0
. -
If the value is
vector
, the orientation is interpreted as a packed vector consisiting of two signed 4-bit fields. This representation is used on Atmel Object Based Protocol parts. When decoded, the vector yields an orientation angle and confidence magnitude. The confidence magnitude is used to scale the size information, unless it is geometric. -
If the value is
default
, the system uses theinterpolated
calibration if the orientation axis available, otherwise usesnone
.
Calculation
The calculation of the Orientation
and Tilt
fields depends on the specified calibration parameters and available input.
If touch.tiltX and touch.tiltY are available: tiltXCenter = average(raw.tiltX.min, raw.tiltX.max) tiltYCenter = average(raw.tiltY.min, raw.tiltY.max) tiltXAngle = (raw.tiltX - tiltXCenter) * PI / 180 tiltYAngle = (raw.tiltY - tiltYCenter) * PI / 180 output.orientation = atan2(-sin(tiltXAngle), sinf(tiltYAngle)) output.tilt = acos(cos(tiltXAngle) * cos(tiltYAngle)) Else If touch.orientation.calibration == "interpolated": center = average(raw.orientation.min, raw.orientation.max) output.orientation = PI / (raw.orientation.max - raw.orientation.min) output.tilt = 0 Else If touch.orientation.calibration == "vector": c1 = (raw.orientation & 0xF0) >> 4 c2 = raw.orientation & 0x0F If c1 != 0 or c2 != 0: If c1 >= 8 Then c1 = c1 - 16 If c2 >= 8 Then c2 = c2 - 16 angle = atan2(c1, c2) / 2 confidence = sqrt(c1*c1 + c2*c2) output.orientation = angle If touch.size.calibration == "diameter" or "area": scale = 1.0 + confidence / 16 output.touchMajor *= scale output.touchMinor /= scale output.toolMajor *= scale output.toolMinor /= scale End If Else output.orientation = 0 End If output.tilt = 0Else output.orientation = 0 output.tilt = 0End IfIf orientation aware: If screen rotation is 90 degrees: output.orientation = output.orientation - PI / 2 Else If screen rotation is 270 degrees: output.orientation = output.orientation + PI / 2 End IfEnd If
Distance
Field
The Distance
field describes the distance between the tool and the touch device surface. A value of 0.0 indicates direct contact and larger values indicate increasing distance from the surface.
touch.distance.calibration
Definition: touch.distance.calibration
= none
| scaled
| default
Specifies the kind of measurement used by the touch driver to report the distance.
-
If the value is
none
, the distance is unknown so it is set to 0. -
If the value is
scaled
, the reported distance is multiplied by a constant scale factor. -
If the value is
default
, the system uses thescaled
calibration if the distance axis available, otherwise usesnone
.
touch.distance.scale
Definition: touch.distance.scale
= <a non-negative floating point number>
Specifies a constant scale factor used in the calibration.
The default value is 1.0
.
Calculation
The calculation of the Distance
field depends on the specified calibration parameters.
If touch.distance.calibration == "scaled": output.distance = raw.distance * touch.distance.scale Else output.distance = 0 End If
Example
# Input device configuration file for a touch screen that supports pressure, # size and orientation. The pressure and size scale factors were obtained # by measuring the characteristics of the device itself and deriving # useful approximations based on the resolution of the touch sensor and the # display. # # Note that these parameters are specific to a particular device model. # Different parameters will need to be used for other devices. # Basic Parameters touch.deviceType = touchScreen touch.orientationAware = 1 # Size # Based on empirical measurements, we estimate the size of the contact # using size = sqrt(area) * 28 + 0. touch.size.calibration = area touch.size.scale = 28 touch.size.bias = 0 touch.size.isSummed = 0 # Pressure # Driver reports signal strength as pressure. # # A normal index finger touch typically registers about 80 signal strength # units although we don't expect these values to be accurate. touch.pressure.calibration = amplitude touch.pressure.scale = 0.0125 # Orientation touch.orientation.calibration = vector
Compatibility Notes
The configuration properties for touch devices changed significantly in Android Ice Cream Sandwich 4.0. All input device configuration files for touch devices must be updated to use the new configuration properties.
Older touch device may also need to be updated.
Virtual Key Map Files
Touch devices are often used to implement virtual keys.
There are several ways of doing this, depending on the capabilities of the touch controller. Some touch controllers can be directly configured to implement soft keys by setting firmware registers. Other times it is desirable to perform the mapping from touch coordinates to key codes in software.
When virtual keys are implemented in software, the kernel must export a virtual key map file called virtualkeys.<devicename>
as a board property. For example, if the touch screen device drivers reports its name as "touchyfeely" then the virtual key map file must have the path /sys/board_properties/virtualkeys.touchyfeely
.
A virtual key map file describes the coordinates and Linux key codes of virtual keys on the touch screen.
In addition to the virtual key map file, there must be a corresponding key layout file and key character map file to map the Linux key codes to Android key codes and to specify the type of the keyboard device (usually SPECIAL_FUNCTION
).
Syntax
A virtual key map file is a plain text file consisting of a sequence of virtual key layout descriptions either separated by newlines or by colons.
Comment lines begin with '#' and continue to the end of the line.
Each virtual key is described by 6 colon-delimited components:
0x01
: A version code. Must always be0x01
.- <Linux key code>: The Linux key code of the virtual key.
- <centerX>: The X pixel coordinate of the center of the virtual key.
- <centerY>: The Y pixel coordinate of the center of the virtual key.
- <width>: The width of the virtual key in pixels.
- <height>: The height of the virtual key in pixels.
All coordinates and sizes are specified in terms of the display coordinate system.
Here is a virtual key map file all written on one line.
# All on one line 0x01:158:55:835:90:55:0x01:139:172:835:125:55:0x01:102:298:835:115:55:0x01:217:412:835:95:55
The same virtual key map file can also be written on multiple lines.
# One key per line 0x01:158:55:835:90:55 0x01:139:172:835:125:55 0x01:102:298:835:115:55 0x01:217:412:835:95:55
In the above example, the touch screen has a resolution of 480x800. Accordingly, all of the virtual keys have a <centerY> coordinate of 835, which is a little bit below the visible area of the touch screen.
The first key has a Linux scan code of 158
(KEY_BACK
), centerX of 55
, centerY of 835
, width of 90
and height of 55
.
Example
Virtual key map file: /sys/board_properties/virtualkeys.touchyfeely
.
0x01:158:55:835:90:55 0x01:139:172:835:125:55 0x01:102:298:835:115:55 0x01:217:412:835:95:55
Key layout file: /system/usr/keylayout/touchyfeely.kl
.
key 158 BACK key 139 MENU key 102 HOME key 217 SEARCH
Key character map file: /system/usr/keychars/touchyfeely.kcm
.
type SPECIAL_FUNCTION
Indirect Multi-touch Pointer Gestures
In pointer mode, the system interprets the following gestures:
-
Single finger tap: click.
-
Single finger motion: move the pointer.
-
Single finger motion plus button presses: drag the pointer.
-
Two finger motion both fingers moving in the same direction: drag the area under the pointer in that direction. The pointer itself does not move.
-
Two finger motion both fingers moving towards each other or apart in different directions: pan/scale/rotate the area surrounding the pointer. The pointer itself does not move.
-
Multiple finger motion: freeform gesture.