xcursor is a pretty loose standard. a shell should take whatever the cursor name string is and see if the current cursor theme provides it. It could go an extra mile and have fallbacks for well-know cursor names in case the specified one isn't there (like unity8 does).
That's all there's to it. Don't see how using those mir string constants help with anything in that regard.
xcursor is a pretty loose standard. a shell should take whatever the cursor name string is and see if the current cursor theme provides it. It could go an extra mile and have fallbacks for well-know cursor names in case the specified one isn't there (like unity8 does).
That's all there's to it. Don't see how using those mir string constants help with anything in that regard.