hsautogui: Haskell bindings for PyAutoGUI, a library for automating user interaction

[ automation, bsd3, library ] [ Propose Tags ]
Versions [RSS] 0.1.0, 0.2.0, 0.3.0
Change log changelog.md
Dependencies base, containers, cpython (>=3.5.1), mtl, template-haskell, text [details]
License BSD-3-Clause
Copyright 2020 Mitchell Vitez
Author Mitchell Vitez
Maintainer mitchell@vitez.me
Category Automation
Home page https://github.com/mitchellvitez/hsautogui#readme
Bug tracker https://github.com/mitchellvitez/hsautogui/issues
Source repo head: git clone https://github.com/mitchellvitez/hsautogui
Uploaded by MitchellVitez at 2021-01-09T04:43:58Z
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Status Docs uploaded by user [build log]
All reported builds failed as of 2021-01-09 [all 2 reports]

Readme for hsautogui-0.3.0

[back to package description]

hsautogui

Haskell bindings for PyAutoGUI

About

These are straightforward Haskell bindings for PyAutoGUI, a library for automating user interaction tasks, using haskell-cpython.

This is just about the simplest possible example:

import AutoGUI
main = do
  initialize
  write "Hello, world!"

This doesn't just print Hello, world! to the screen, but instead simulates a user typing it in.

Language Comparison

The following Haskell and Python examples do the same thing:

import AutoGUI
import Control.Monad (forM_)

main :: IO ()
main = do
  initialize
  putStrLn "3 seconds until beeping begins"
  sleep 3
  forM_ [1..100] $ \i -> do
    write "beep"
    press [key|enter|]
    sleep 0.5
import pyautogui
import time

print('3 seconds until beeping begins')
time.sleep(3)

for i in range(1, 101):
    pyautogui.write('beep')
    pyautogui.press('enter')
    time.sleep(0.5)

Constructing a Key

Because not all valid Texts are valid Keys, we need a way to check that Keys are valid when creating them. This leads to mkKey :: Text -> Maybe Key. However, using the key quasiquoter, we can sidestep having to use Maybe by catching invalid keys at compile time. For example, [key|backspace|] is a valid Key which we can construct and check at compile time.

This is especially useful for some data that looks like this, where there are way too many values (and values with strange characters) for a sum type to be especially handy, but we want to check validity in some way. We generally know which keys we want to use at compile time.

Overview

General

Debug

  • pause :: Double -> IO () - Set a number of seconds to wait in between autogui actions
  • failsafe :: Bool -> IO () - When set to true, move the mouse to the upper-left corner of the screen to throw a Python exception, and quit the program
  • sleep :: Double -> IO () - Sleep for a given fractional number of seconds

Info

  • size :: IO (Integer, Integer) - (screenWidth, screenHeight) of the primary monitor in pixels
  • position :: IO (Integer, Integer) - (x, y) position of the mouse
  • onScreen :: Integer -> Integer -> IO Bool - Test whether (x, y) is within the screen size

Keyboard

  • write :: Text -> IO () - Write out some Text as though it were entered with the keyboard
  • typewrite :: Text -> IO () - Write out some Text as though it were entered with the keyboard, newline is enter
  • typewriteKeys :: [Key] -> IO () - Write out some Text as though it were entered with the keyboard, newline is enter
  • writeWithInterval :: Text -> Double -> IO () - Write out some Text as though it were entered with the keyboard, with a specified number of seconds between keypresses
  • press :: Key -> IO () - Simulate a keypress
  • keyDown :: Key -> IO () - Simulate holding a key down
  • keyUp :: Key -> IO () - Simulate releasing a key
  • hotkey :: [Key] -> IO () - Press a key combination

Keys

  • key :: QuasiQuoter - This quasiquoter lets you use [key|enter|] at compile time, so you don't get a Maybe as you would from mkKey
  • mkKey :: Text -> Maybe Key
  • keyToText :: Key -> Text
  • isValidKey :: Text -> Bool
  • keys :: Set Key

Message Boxes

  • alert :: Text -> IO () - Show a box onscreen until dismissed
  • confirm :: Text -> IO Bool - Show a box onscreen until a user hits OK or Cancel. Return True on OK, False on Cancel, and False if user closes the box
  • password :: Text -> IO Text - Show a box onscreen, allowing user to enter some screened text. Return empty string if user closes the box
  • prompt :: Text -> IO Text - Show a box onscreen, allowing user to enter some text. Return empty string if user closes the box

Mouse

  • moveTo :: Integer -> Integer -> IO () - Move the mouse to an (x, y) position
  • moveToDuration :: Integer -> Integer -> Double -> IO () - Move the mouse to an (x, y) position, over a number of seconds
  • moveRel :: Integer -> Integer -> IO () - Move the mouse relative to where it is now
  • moveRelDuration :: Integer -> Integer -> Double -> IO () - Move the mouse relative to where it is now, over a number of seconds
  • click :: MouseButton -> IO () - Click the specified mouse button
  • leftClick :: IO () - Left click the mouse
  • doubleClick :: IO () - Double click the mouse
  • tripleClick :: IO () - Triple click the mouse
  • rightClick :: IO () - Right click the mouse
  • middleClick :: IO () - Middle click the mouse
  • moveAndClick :: Integer -> Integer -> IO () - Move the mouse to some (x, y) position and click there
  • drag :: Integer -> Integer -> IO () - Clicks and drags the mouse through a motion of (x, y)
  • dragDuration :: Integer -> Integer -> Double -> IO () - Clicks and drags the mouse through a motion of (x, y), over a number of seconds
  • dragTo :: Integer -> Integer -> IO () - Clicks and drags the mouse to the position (x, y)
  • dragToDuration :: Integer -> Integer -> Double -> IO () - Clicks and drags the mouse to the position (x, y), over a number of seconds
  • dragRel :: Integer -> Integer -> IO () - Clicks and drags the mouse through a motion of (x, y)
  • dragRelDuration :: Integer -> Integer -> Double -> IO () - Clicks and drags the mouse through a motion of (x, y)
  • scroll :: Integer -> IO () - Scroll up (positive) or down (negative)
  • mouseDown :: IO () - Press the mouse button down
  • mouseUp :: IO () - Release the mouse button

Screen

  • locateOnScreen :: FilePath -> IO (Maybe (Integer, Integer, Integer, Integer)) - Return (left, top, width, height) of first place the image is found
  • locateCenterOnScreen :: FilePath -> IO (Maybe (Integer, Integer)) - Return (x, y) of center of an image, if the image is found