When your cursor turns into a hand, you are typically hovering over an interactive element on a webpage, such as a hyperlink or a clickable button. This visual cue indicates that the item can be clicked to perform an action, like navigating to another page or triggering a specific function. The hand cursor enhances user experience by signaling interactivity.
cursor
To add cursors on Cursor Mania, click copy code, then "My Cursors" on the left hand side.
The cursor becomes a hand written you hover over YouTube videos because it has moved onto something that you can click on, like a link.
Just google Naruto Cursors. you'll be suprised what turns up.
you roll over things that you can click on
The arrow is a pointer, but it could be a hand or a dinosaur or a cursor.
You need to use a "style" mark-up language known as CSS (which is short for Cascading Style Sheet). Put this in the head of your HTML document: <style type=text/css> body { cursor: CURSOR_NAME; } </style> And these are the valid values for CURSOR_NAME - simply replace that bit with the appropriate cursor type from this list: cursor: auto (uses what is set by user) cursor: crosshair (should produce a cross) cursor: default (cursor remains as it is) cursor: e-resize (arrow pointing right) cursor: hand (the traditional pointing hand) cursor: help (a Question Mark should appear) cursor: move (a cross with arrows on the tips) cursor: n-resize (an arrow pointing north or up) cursor: ne-resize (an arrow pointing northeast) cursor: nw-resize (an arrow pointing northwest) cursor: pointer (that hand again) cursor: s-resize (an arrow pointing south or down) cursor: se-resize (an arrow pointing southeast) cursor: sw-resize (an arrow pointing southwest) cursor: text (looks like the end of an I-beam) cursor: w-resize (an arrow pointing west) cursor: wait (an hourglass)
it shows a hand pointing to it
I am not sure about the technical term, but since it oonly appears when your cursor is over a link, so it would be the 'link access' cursor.
Cursor styles in Excel refer to the different shapes and appearances of the mouse pointer that indicate the type of action you can perform. For example, a standard arrow cursor is used for selecting cells, while a crosshair cursor appears when you're resizing columns or rows. Other cursor styles include the hand icon for hyperlinks and the text cursor for editing cell contents. These visual cues help users understand the available actions within the Excel interface.
Navigate to (drive letter):\Windows\Cursors for a list of all cursors and their names.
You just move your hand across the dotted mark with your cursor down.