Pointer Lock 2.0

W3C Working Draft

More details about this document
This version:
https://www.w3.org/TR/2024/WD-pointerlock-2-20240617/
Latest published version:
https://www.w3.org/TR/pointerlock-2/
Latest editor's draft:
https://w3c.github.io/pointerlock/
History:
https://www.w3.org/standards/history/pointerlock-2/
Commit history
Test suite:
https://github.com/web-platform-tests/wpt/tree/master/pointerlock
Editors:
Mustaq Ahmed (Google)
Vincent Scheib (Google)
Former editor:
Navid Zolghadr (Google)
Feedback:
GitHub w3c/pointerlock (pull requests, new issue, open issues)
Browser support:
caniuse.com

Abstract

This specification defines an API that provides scripted access to raw mouse movement data while locking the target of mouse events to a single element and removing the cursor from view. This is an essential input mode for certain classes of applications, especially first person perspective 3D applications and 3D modeling software.

Status of This Document

This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at https://www.w3.org/TR/.

A history of changes to this document can be found at https://github.com/w3c/pointerlock/commits/gh-pages/index.html

Summary of changes since W3C Recommendation 27 October 2016:

This document was published by the Web Applications Working Group as a Working Draft using the Recommendation track.

Publication as a Working Draft does not imply endorsement by W3C and its Members.

This is a draft document and may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to cite this document as other than work in progress.

This document was produced by a group operating under the W3C Patent Policy. W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.

This document is governed by the 03 November 2023 W3C Process Document.

1. Introduction

This section is non-normative.

The Pointer Lock API provides applications the ability to directly interpret mouse movements as an input method, rather than being limited to only read the position of the mouse cursor. A popular example is that of first person movement controls in three dimensional graphics applications such as games: movement of the mouse is interpreted to control the rotation/direction of the player's camera; no mouse cursor is displayed, and the movement is not limited to the traditional boundaries (such as the user agent's window, or the overall screen) that the mouse cursor is usually subject to, meaning that any mouse movements can be tracked indefinitely in any direction.

Pointer Lock is related to Mouse Capture [MDN-SETCAPTURE] (Mouse Capture is unspecified: bug 14600). Capture provides continued event delivery to a target element while a mouse is being dragged, but ceases when the mouse button is released. Pointer Lock differs by being persistent, not limited by screen boundaries, sending events regardless of mouse button state, hiding the cursor, and not releasing until an API call or specific default unlock gesture by the user.

Pointer Lock deals with capturing a single resource and relating it to a single element. This is similar to the Fullscreen API [FULLSCREEN], which promotes a single element to be full screen. The Pointer Lock API chooses to pattern the resource capture, state change, and release API as closely as possible after the Fullscreen API.

The Pointer Lock interaction mode was previously referred to as mouse lock. The name was changed as many different controller types besides mice can manipulate the on screen pointing cursor, and they are all impacted.

2. Pointer Lock and Interfaces

2.1 The pointer lock state definition

The pointer lock state is the state where a single DOM element, which we will call the pointer-lock target, receives all mouse events and the cursor is hidden.

Once in the pointer lock state the user agent has a pointer-lock target, a pointer-lock options, which is a PointerLockOptions and a cursor position which is a pair of numbers representing the location of the system mouse cursor when the Pointer Lock State was entered (the same location that is reported in screenX, screenY). The pointer-lock target receives all relevant user generated MouseEvent events: namely, all user-generated mousemove, mousedown, mouseup, click, dblclick, auxclick, and wheel [ui-events]. No other elements receive these events while in pointer lock state. There will be no dispatching of events that require the concept of a mouse cursor: namely, mouseenter, mouseleave, mouseover, mouseout, drag, and drop.

Issue 97: Section 2.1 should mention the effect of lock on PointerEvents

This came up in this thread on #49:

Would it be possible to list these events normatively, instead of only giving some examples?

I think the current text is OK, because the lack of precision here is just a symptom of the larger lack of precision in how mouse events are specified in general. Some progress is being made there, in w3c/uievents#200, and if that lands then eventually this paragraph can move into the UI events spec as an actual change to the processing model.

But in the meantime, it would help achieve interoperability if you were precise about the list of events.

For example, it's not clear to me whether pointer events are impacted by this change.

While in the pointer lock state if the pointer-lock options' unadjustedMovement member is true, the event coordinates will not be affected by the underlying platform behaviors such as mouse acceleration. In other words, the user agent uses the APIs provided by the underlying platform to guarantee getting the raw events. If the PointerLockOptions' unadjustedMovement member is false, the user agent relies on the default behavior of the underlying platform regarding the mouse acceleration.

In the pointer lock state, the system mouse cursor is hidden and the window is prevented from losing focus, regardless of mouse movement or button presses. This is directly or indirectly achieved utilizing the underlying operating system API.

Note

Synthetic mouse events created by application script act the same regardless of lock state.

2.2 PointerLockOptions dictionary

WebIDLdictionary PointerLockOptions {
  boolean unadjustedMovement = false;
};
PointerLockOptions dictionary

The options dictionary to customize how the pointer behaves in the locked mode.

unadjustedMovement member

If this value is set to true, then the pointer movements will not be affected by the underlying platform modifications such as mouse accelaration.

2.3 pointerlockchange and pointerlockerror Events

Two events are used to communicate pointer lock state change or an error in changing state. They are named pointerlockchange and pointerlockerror. Refer to algorithm of 3. Extensions to the Element Interface for detail.

Note

Magnification software increases the size of content on the screen. It uses the mouse to move the magnified point of focus around. When a pointer lock is initiated, the magnification software needs to switch to using the keyboard to move the magnified point of focus around instead. When a pointerlockchange event is fired, web browsers therefore need to make sure the event is communicated to assistive technologies like screen magnifiers.

2.4 Exit Pointer Lock

The process of exiting pointer lock, given an element, is as follows:

  1. The system mouse cursor must be displayed again and positioned at cursor position.
  2. Queue an element task on the user interaction task source to fire an event named pointerlockchange at the given element's node document.
  3. Exit the pointer lock state by setting pointer-lock target, pointer-lock options, and cursor position to null.

3. Extensions to the Element Interface

The Element interface is extended to provide the ability to request the pointer be locked.

WebIDLpartial interface Element {
  Promise<undefined> requestPointerLock(optional PointerLockOptions options = {});
};
const lock_element = document.getElementById("lock_element");
const lock_button = document.getElementById("lock");
lock_button.addEventListener("click", async (event) => {
    try {
        await lock_element.requestPointerLock({ unadjustedMovement: true });
        console.log("successfully locked!");
    } catch (e) {
        console.log("lock failed with error: ", e);
    }
});
requestPointerLock(PointerLockOptions options) method

A parallel queue named as lock requests queue is used for queuing all requests. When requestPointerLock() is invoked, perform the following steps:

  1. Let promise be a new promise.
  2. When a window is in focus, if the this's shadow-including root is the active document of a browsing context (or has an ancestor browsing context) that is not in focus:
    1. Queue an element task on the user interaction task source, given this, to perform the following steps:
      1. Fire an event named pointerlockerror at this's node document.
      2. Reject promise with a "WrongDocumentError" DOMException.
    2. Return promise.
    Issue 93: Visibility state checks

    The spec should not allow hidden documents to request pointer lock.

    Additionally, should a document become hidden, it should release the pointer lock.

  3. If the 'relevant global object does not have transient activation and the Document has not previously released a successful pointer lock with exitPointerLock():
    1. Queue an element task on the user interaction task source, given this, to perform the following steps:
      1. Fire an event named pointerlockerror at this's node document.
      2. Reject promise with a "NotAllowedError" DOMException.
    2. Return promise.
    Note
  4. If this's node document's active sandboxing flag set has the sandboxed pointer lock browsing context flag set:
    1. Queue an element task on the user interaction task source, given this, to perform the following steps:
      1. Fire an event named pointerlockerror at this's node document.
      2. Reject promise with a "SecurityError" DOMException.
    2. Return promise.
  5. If options["unadjustedMovement"] is true and the platform does not support unadjustedMovement:
    1. Queue an element task on the user interaction task source, given this, to perform the following steps:
      1. Fire an event named pointerlockerror at this's node document.
      2. Reject promise with a "NotSupportedError" DOMException.
    2. Return promise.
    Issue 90: Propose to add a static field to indicate whether `unadjustedMovement` is supported.

    In PR #49, PointerLockOptions is introduced. However, unadjustedMovement of PointerLockOptions might not be supported on all platforms. A static field could be useful to determine whether it is supported before directly using it in PointerLockOptions and get a not supported error.

  6. Enqueue the following steps to the lock requests queue:
    1. If the user agent's pointer-lock target is an element whose shadow-including root is not equal to this's shadow-including root, then:
      1. Queue an element task on the user interaction task source, given this, to perform the following steps:
        1. Fire an event named pointerlockerror at this's node document.
        2. Reject promise with a "InvalidStateError" DOMException.
    2. If the user agent's pointer-lock target's shadow-including root is equal to this's shadow-including root and options are equivalent to the current pointer-lock options, then:
      1. Set pointer-lock target to this.
      2. Queue an element task on the user interaction task source, given this, to perform the following steps:
        1. Fire an event named pointerlockchange at this's node document.
        2. Resolve the promise.
    3. If pointer-lock target is null, or options is not equivalent to the current pointer-lock options, process the lock request and handle response upon fulfillment:
      1. If the lock request failed:
        1. Queue an element task on the user interaction task source, given this, to perform the following steps:
          1. Fire an event named pointerlockerror at this's node document.
          2. Reject promise with a "NotSupportedError" DOMException.
        Issue 91: When a subsequent requestPointerLock is rejected, should an already locked target exit lock state?

        In the PR #49's algorithm of requestPointerLock is currently missing the description for the scenario:
        When a subsequent request failed (for any possible reason), should an already locked target exit lock state?

      2. If the lock request succeed:
        1. Enter pointer lock state by performing the following:
          1. Set the user agent's pointer-lock target to this.
          2. Set the user agent's cursor position to the current system mouse location.
          3. Set the pointer-lock options to options.
        2. Queue an element task on the user interaction task source, given this, to perform the following steps:
          1. Fire an event named pointerlockchange at this's node document.
          2. Resolve the promise.
    Issue 96: lock requests queue processing is incomplete

    In the PR#49's algorithm of requestPointerLock is currently missing the description about how entries in lock requests queue are processed. Without an explicit text, we will leave open the incorrect (?) assumption that all entries will be synchronously dequeued at the end.

  7. Return promise.
Note

4. Extensions to the Document Interface

WebIDLpartial interface Document {
  attribute EventHandler onpointerlockchange;
  attribute EventHandler onpointerlockerror;
  undefined exitPointerLock();
};
onpointerlockchange attribute

An event handler idl attribute for pointerlockchange events.

onpointerlockerror attribute

An event handler idl attribute for pointerlockerror events.

exitPointerLock() method
  1. If the user agent's pointer-lock target is null, then return.
  2. If pointer-lock target's shadow-including rootis not equal to this's node document, return.
  3. Exit pointer lock with the user agent's pointer-lock target.

5. Extensions to the DocumentOrShadowRoot Mixin

WebIDLpartial interface mixin DocumentOrShadowRoot {
  readonly attribute Element? pointerLockElement;
};
pointerLockElement

While the pointer is locked, returns the result of retargeting the element, which is the target for mouse events, against this element if the result and this element are in the same tree, otherwise returns null.

Returns null if lock is pending or if pointer is unlocked.

<body>
  <div id="host1">
    <shadow-root id="root1">
      <canvas id="canvas1"></canvas>
    </shadow-root>
  </div>
  <div id="host2">
    <shadow-root id="root2">
      <canvas id="canvas2"></canvas>
    </shadow-root>
  </div>
</body>
Note

The example uses fictional shadow-root element to denote a shadow root instance.

If #canvas1 is the target, document.pointerLockElement returns #host1, and root1.pointerLockElement returns #canvas1. The result of retargeting #canvas1 against #root2 is #host1, but as #host1 is not in the same tree as #root2, null will be returned for root2.pointerLockElement.

6. Extensions to the MouseEvent Interface

WebIDLpartial interface MouseEvent {
  readonly attribute double movementX;
  readonly attribute double movementY;
};
movementX attribute
movementY attribute

The attributes movementX and movementY must provide the change in position of the pointer, as if the values of screenX, screenY, were stored between two subsequent mousemove events eNow and ePrevious and the difference taken movementX = eNow.screenX - ePrevious.screenX.

movementX and movementY must be zero for all mouse events except mousemove. All motion data must be delivered via mousemove events such that between any two mouse events earlierEvent and currentEvent the value of currentEvent.screenX - earlierEvent.screenX is equivalent to the sum of all movementX in the events after earlierEvent, with the exception of when screenX can not be updated because the pointer is clipped by the user agent screen boundaries.

movementX and movementY must be updated regardless of pointer lock state.

When unlocked, the system cursor can exit and re-enter the user agent window. If it does so and the user agent was not the target of operating system mouse move events then the most recent pointer position will be unknown to the user agent and movementX / movementY can not be computed and must be set to zero.

When pointer lock is enabled clientX, clientY, screenX, and screenY must hold constant values as if the pointer did not move at all once pointer lock was entered. But movementX and movementY must continue to provide the change in position of the pointer as when the pointer is unlocked. There will be no limit to movementX and movementY values if the mouse is continuously moved in a single direction. The concept of the mouse cursor will have been removed, and it will not move off the window or be clamped by a screen edge.

The un-initialized value of movementX and movementY must be 0.

Large movement values must not appear in situations when mouse input is interupted, such as the mouse cursor leaving the window and then re-entering at another location. If a user agent experiences a gap in receiving mouse input data from the operating system then the next generated mousemove event must have movementX and movementY set to 0. These gaps may appear for example when the user agent receives a mouse leaving event at the window system API. As an exception mouse capture may allow the user agent to continue receiving mouse events when the cursor moves outside the window.

7. Extensions to the MouseEventInit Dictionary

WebIDLpartial dictionary MouseEventInit {
  double movementX = 0;
  double movementY = 0;
};
movementX member
movementY member
The members movementX and movementY are used to initialize respective members of MouseEvent.

8. Requirements

A default unlock gesture must always be available that will exit pointer lock with the user agent's pointer-lock target.

Note

Pointer lock must be exited if the pointer-lock target becomes disconnected, or the user agent, window, or tab loses focus. Moving focus between elements of active document, including between browsing contexts , does not exit pointer lock. E.g. using the keyboard to move focus between contents of frames or iframes will not exit.

Pointer lock must not be exited when fullscreen [FULLSCREEN] is entered or exited unless the pointer is required to enable interaction with the user agent graphical user interface, the default unlock gesture was used to exit both fullscreen and pointer lock, or window or tab focus was lost.

9. Use Cases

This section is non-normative.

9.1 Relative view-port rotation of free moving virtual actors

A player on a first/third person game will need to control the view-port orientation. A widely used method is the use of mouse movements to control the viewing angle. This kind of application can use the Pointer Lock API to allow a complete freedom of control over the viewport's yaw and pitch even when the user is not pressing mouse buttons. Those buttons can be used for other actions while constantly providing navigation via mouse movement.

9.2 Free rotation of 3D models or panning of 2D layers

Users of a three dimensional modeling application will need to rotate models. A application can use the Pointer Lock API to enable the author to rotate the model freely in a drag operation without limiting motion. Without pointer lock a drag would stop providing motion data when the mouse cursor is limited by the edge of the screen.

Similarly, absolute motion panning of a large two dimensional image could be permitted in a single drag operation without cursor / screen limits.

9.3 Relative movement of actors

A player on a fast reflexes game controls a paddle to bounce back a ball to the opponent, while allowing the same paddle to execute actions based on different mouse buttons being pressed. The application can use the Pointer Lock API to allow the player to react quickly without being concerned about the mouse cursor leaving the game play area and clicking another system application, thus breaking the game flow.

9.4 Jog movement over spinner controls

When modifying numerically magnitudes in applications sometimes the user will prefer to "drag" a numeric control by its button handles to increment or decrement the numeric value. E.g. a spinner with a number entry text box and arrows pointing up and down that can be clicked or dragged on to change the value. An application could use the Pointer Lock API to allow modifying the numeric values beyond what the logical screen bounds allow. The same could apply for a control that fast forwards or rewinds a video or audio stream like a "jog".

9.5 Synthetic cursor interaction with HTML DOM UI

Some games use a classical cursor, however they want it to be limited or controlled in some manner. E.g. limited to the bounds of the game, or movable by the game. Locking the pointer enables this if the application creates their own cursor. However HTML and DOM should still be available to use for user interface. Synthetic mouse events should be permitted to allow an application defined cursor to interact with DOM. E.g. the following code should permit a custom cursor to send click events while the pointer is locked:

document.addEventListener("click", function (e) {
  if (e._isSynthetic)
    return;
  // send a synthetic click
  var ee = document.createEvent("MouseEvents");
  ee._isSynthetic = true;
  x = myCursor.x;
  y = myCursor.y;
  ee.initMouseEvent("click", true, true, null, 1,
                    x + e.screenX - e.clientX,
                    y + e.screenY - e.clientY,
                    x,
                    y);
  var target = document.elementFromPoint(x, y);
  if (target)
    target.dispatchEvent(ee);
});

Note that synthetic clicks may not be permitted by a user agent to produce the same default action as a non-synthetic click. However, application handlers can still take action and provide user interface with existing HTML & DOM mechanisms.

9.6 View-port panning by moving a mouse cursor against the bounds of a view-port.

Real Time Strategy games often use this technique. When the player moves the pointer to the view-port borders, if they "push" the border with a mouse movement, the view-port is panned over the game area according to how much they move the mouse. When moving the mouse cursor within the bounds of the view port it acts at is typically would on a system. Applications may choose to implement this using pointer lock and the previous use case of "Synthetic cursor interaction with HTML DOM UI" to bring cursor behavior completely under their control.

9.7 Game Lobby, timer based pointer lock

Games that use pointer lock may desire a traditional UI and system cursor while players prepare in a game lobby. Games usually start after a short timer when all players are ready. Ideally the game could then switch to pointer lock mode without a user activation. Players should be able to seamlessly move from the game lobby into game navigation.

9.8 Game Portal

Game portals, and other sites such as Facebook and Google Plus, host games for users to play. These games may be hosted and served from a different origin from that of the portal site. Embedded games should be able to lock the pointer, even in non-full screen mode.

10. Security

This section is non-normative.

Security Concerns:

Responses:

Recommendations:

Pointer lock is a required user interaction mode for certain application types, but carries a usability concern if maliciously used. An attacker could remove the ability for a user to control their mouse cursor on their system. user agents will prevent this by always providing a mechanism to exit pointer lock, by informing the user of how, and by limiting how pointer lock can be entered.

user agents will determine their own appropriate policies, which may be specialized per device or differ based on user options.

11. Frequently Asked Questions

This section is non-normative.

11.1 Why not merge with Mouse Capture: setCapture()?

Mouse Capture [MDN-SETCAPTURE] handles low security risk mouse event target lock for the duration of a mouse drag gesture. Pointer lock removes the concept of the cursor and directs all events to a given target. They are related, but different.

If a browser implemented both, it would be reasonable to support a combination of traits: The security simplicity of "automatically release lock when mouse up" and the increased functionality of total control over mouse input and removal of the system cursor. The security trait would allow more permissive use of the feature for applications that only required a short burst of pointer lock during a drag event.

This functionality is omitted from the initial version of this spec because it helps the minor use cases in windowed mode but we still do not have an implementation solving the major ones. And, to implement this a browser must implement both, which none does yet. It is not clear if this feature should live on .lock or on .setCapture. If both were implemented, either API could be augmented fairly easily to offer the hybrid functionality.

11.2 Why not repurpose MouseEvent's .clientX/Y .screenX/Y?

Even in non locked state, the delta values of mouse movement are useful. Changing the meaning of .client or .screen based on lock state would also cause easy errors in code not carefully monitoring the lock state.

11.3 Why use .movementX/Y instead of .deltaX/Y?

When the pointer is locked 'wheel' events should be sent to the pointer-lock target element just as 'mousemove' events are. There is a naming conflict with .deltaX/Y/Z as defined in DOM 3 'wheel' event.

11.4 Why bundle all functionality (hiding cursor, providing mouse deltas) instead of using CSS to hide the cursor, always providing delta values, and offering an API to restrict the cursor movement to a portion of the web page?

There are good motivations to provide a more fine grained approach. E.g. the use case "View-port panning by moving a mouse cursor against the bounds of a view-port" doesn't require hiding the mouse cursor, only bounding it and always having delta values available. Also, this specification defines the movement deltas to be taken from how the system mouse cursor moves, which incorporates operating system filtering and acceleration of the mouse movement data. Applications may desire access to a more raw form of movement data prior to adjustments appropriate for a mouse cursor. Also, raw data may provide better than pixel level accuracy for movement, as well as higher frequency updates. Providing the raw delta movement would also not require special permission or mode from a user, and for some set of applications that do not require bounding the cursor may reduce the security barriers and prompts needed.

There are two justifications for postponing this finer grained approach. The first is a concern of specifying what units mouse movement data are provided in. This specification defines .movementX/Y precisely as the same values that could be recorded when the mouse is not under lock by changes in .screenX/Y. Implementations across multiple user agents and operating systems will easily be able to meet that requirement and provide application developers and users with a consistent experience. Further, users are expected to have already configured the full system of hardware input and operating system options resulting in a comfortable control the system mouse cursor. By specifying .movementX/Y in the same units mouse lock API applications will be instantly usable to all users because they have already settled their preferences.

Secondly, the implementation of providing movement data and bounding the mouse cursor is more difficult in the fine grained approach. Bundling the features together gives implementations freedom to use a variety of techniques as appropriate on each operating system and is more practical to implement. Direct APIs do not exist on major desktop platforms (Windows, Mac OS X, Linux) to bound the cursor to a specific rectangle, and prototypes have not yet been developed to demonstrate building that behavior by e.g. invisible windows with Xlib or manual cursor movement on Mac. Unaccelerated Delta values have been proposed to be accessed by reading raw Human Interface Device (HID) data. E.g. WM_INPUT messages on Windows, and USB device APIs on Mac OS X / Linux. The challenge here is interpreting and normalizing the units to some consistent and specifiable scale. Also, most APIs considered to date are limited to USB devices.

It would be reasonable to consider adding these capabilities in the future, as the currently specified pointer lock API would be easy to continue to support if the finer grained delta and confinement features were implemented.

The bundled API is selected for implementation practicality, because the desired use cases are supported, and because it will not conflict with future improvements as discussed here.

11.5 High resolution deltas / High frequency updates?

Not yet, for the same reasons in the previous question: "Why bundle all functionality (hiding cursor, providing mouse deltas) instead of using CSS to hide the cursor, always providing delta values, and offering an API to restrict the cursor movement to a portion of the web page?".

11.6 Why modify MouseEvent and reuse existing mouse events instead of creating a mouse delta event?

When under pointer lock many mouse events remain relevant, e.g. click, mousedown, etc. These all share the same event data structure MouseEvent. If movement data were reported via a new data structure then a new event would be needed for reporting delta movement. The new data structure would have many parallels to MouseEvent to offer the same conveniences, e.g. button and modifier key states. When handling click, down, and up events would the existing mousedown, mouseup be used? If so, they would provide .clientX/Y and .screenX/Y with no useful data, but would lack the convenience of containing the current movement data. Or, new events would also be required for when the mouse is locked.

Also, movementX/Y are convenient even when the mouse is not locked. This spec requires movement members to always be valid, even when the mouse cursor exists. This reduces code required to track the last cursor state and mouseover/mouseout transitions if applications wish to make use of delta motion of the mouse.

The only negative of adding movementX/Y to MouseEvent appears to be the unused values in clientX/Y and screenX/Y when under pointer lock. This does not seem to be a significant problem.

Therefore the minimal change to add movementX/Y to MouseEvent is selected to reduce API and implementation complexity.

11.7 Why separate targets for mouse events under pointer lock and keyboard input focus?

Consider a game with a 3D view controlled by moving the mouse cursor, while the user may still chat with other users via a text console. It is reasonable for the application to accept text input to an element that is different than where mouse events are being dispatched. This is similar to pre-existing behavior of receiving mousemove events over any element while typing into a form on a page.

12. Conformance

As well as sections marked as non-normative, all authoring guidelines, diagrams, examples, and notes in this specification are non-normative. Everything else in this specification is normative.

This specification defines conformance criteria that apply to a single product: the user agent that implements the interfaces that it contains.

A. Acknowledgments

This section is non-normative.

Many thanks to lots of people who made contributions to the discussions of this specification:

B. References

B.1 Normative references

[dom]
DOM Standard. Anne van Kesteren. WHATWG. Living Standard. URL: https://dom.spec.whatwg.org/
[FULLSCREEN]
Fullscreen API Standard. Philip Jägenstedt. WHATWG. Living Standard. URL: https://fullscreen.spec.whatwg.org/
[html]
HTML Standard. Anne van Kesteren; Domenic Denicola; Ian Hickson; Philip Jägenstedt; Simon Pieters. WHATWG. Living Standard. URL: https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/
[ui-events]
UI Events. Gary Kacmarcik; Travis Leithead. W3C. 21 February 2024. W3C Working Draft. URL: https://www.w3.org/TR/uievents/
[WEBIDL]
Web IDL Standard. Edgar Chen; Timothy Gu. WHATWG. Living Standard. URL: https://webidl.spec.whatwg.org/

B.2 Informative references

[MDN-SETCAPTURE]
Element.setCapture(). Eric Shepherd; et. al. URL: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Element/setCapture