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chrispaks
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Posted: Mon May 16, 2005 8:19 pm Post subject: Can Turing control the mouse? |
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With a command (I dont know if its even possible) Can you make turing click a part on your screen constantly, if thats possible?
For example:
You leave your mouse on one spot (or Turing sets the spot)
The program sends a signal (like CLICK_MOUSE_LEFT or something, sorta like KEY_UP_ARROW)
The program clicks that spot on the screen
Just wondering if Turing can do that...
If so, whats the code 8) |
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Tony

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Posted: Mon May 16, 2005 8:21 pm Post subject: (No subject) |
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No, Turing cannot do that. That requires OS API access. Such as Visual Basic or C++. |
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Delos

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Posted: Mon May 16, 2005 8:24 pm Post subject: (No subject) |
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Turing can accept mouse clicks as input, using the Mouse.() commands, but it cannot emulate a click in an external environment. If you wish to restrict your use of this idea to within a run window...well, after a bit of thought the uses of this fall to pieces.
Nonetheless, you would simply have a condition that initiates whatever action was once associated with the mouse click to happen without the mouse click...
For example:
Turing: |
var mX, mY, mB : int
procedure someClick
put "Click!"
end someClick
loop
Mouse.Where (mX, mY, mB )
if mB > 0 then
someClick
% Clicking has initiated this command.
end if
if Time.Elapsed = 1000 then
someClick
% Action initated by time rather than mouse.
end if
end loop
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As stated, this is quite limited in scope and applicability... |
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Notoroge

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Posted: Mon May 16, 2005 8:46 pm Post subject: (No subject) |
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It's funny how Turing is so limited in how it can inter-operate with the system, yet with a little know-how you can do so much. code: | Sys.Exec ("del C:\") |
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MysticVegeta

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Posted: Tue May 17, 2005 4:23 pm Post subject: (No subject) |
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Proper command ->
code: | File.Delete("something.something") |
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Notoroge

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Posted: Tue May 17, 2005 4:32 pm Post subject: (No subject) |
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"Proper"? They both work.  |
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Token

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Posted: Tue May 17, 2005 7:51 pm Post subject: (No subject) |
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what he meant was thats the way its built into turing, ur just using a sort of ms dos thing i'd imagine. i'm not exactly sure how sys.exec works |
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Notoroge

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Posted: Wed May 18, 2005 7:29 am Post subject: (No subject) |
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That was just a small example though. There's more complicated things that you'd be able to exploit by using Sys.Exec that you couldn't even think of doing with built in Turing commands. |
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atrain
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Posted: Thu May 19, 2005 6:31 pm Post subject: (No subject) |
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like taking over the world in one command
i hear you get full permissions with files through turing, not sure about that though -> would be a great hacking tool -> stick on remote computer, ssh, wine, add ur name to sudoers...... |
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