On Oct 7, 9:28 am, mhangman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On 7 Ekim, 18:57, Mike Driscoll <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > On Oct 7, 10:42 am, mhangman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > On 7 Ekim, 18:34, Mike Driscoll <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > On Oct 7, 10:13 am, mhangman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > > how can we send keys to keyboard? i want to write a script that will > > > > > push keyboard buttons and do what i want. its for a macro prog. there > > > > > are some kinds at c++ and at java. for example actools prog. but i > > > > > want to this in python... > > > > > > note:im not talking about print a key im talking about use it from its > > > > > device > > > > > please help > > > > > If I understand you correctly, you're probably wanting something like > > > > SendKeys: > > > > >http://pypi.python.org/pypi/SendKeys/0.3 > > > > > Unfortunately, this is for Windows only (as far as I can tell). But > > > > you didn't say what OS you were using, so maybe this will work. > > > > > Mike > > > > ty mike but it use a c++ module with it. cant we find python/made > > > module? > > > or donno.. > > > > bdw: OS windows, linux doesnt matter just let me learn this > > > What difference does it make if it includes a c file (it's not C++)? > > Python itself relies on C code too for some of it's fastest bits. The > > "xrange" builtin is one good example. Besides, I think learning C/C++ > > would be a good idea for any Python programmer that wants to get truly > > proficient in his snake charming. > > > Mike > > ty mike, > im just looking for other ways which can improve my style,information. > i read some java stuff some c++ some c# and c about this work. but can > python do this whiout include any of this? > need to learn, thanks for helping
You definitely need SendKeys, and you definitely need to talk to Windows through some C library. It doesn't matter which bridge you use, but your code is going to touch something written in C eventually to accomplish this. Check out this example: http://code.activestate.com/recipes/65107/ The pywin32 libraries are pretty much a must if you're working in Windows and Python regardless. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list