import pyautogui
# Holds down the alt key
pyautogui.keyDown("alt")
# Presses the tab key once
pyautogui.press("tab")
# Lets go of the alt key
pyautogui.keyUp("alt")
import keyboard # using module keyboard
import time
stop = False
def onkeypress(event):
global stop
if event.name == 'q':
stop = True
# ---------> hook event handler
keyboard.on_press(onkeypress)
# --------->
while True: # making a loop
try: # used try so that if user pressed other than the given key error will not be shown
print("sleeping")
time.sleep(5)
print("slept")
if stop: # if key 'q' is pressed
print('You Pressed A Key!')
break # finishing the loop
except:
print("#######")
break # if user pressed a key other than the given key the loop will break
import keyboard #Using module keyboard
while True: #making a loop
try: #used try so that if user pressed other than the given key error will not be shown
if keyboard.is_pressed('a'): #if key 'a' is pressed
print('You Pressed A Key!')
break #finishing the loop
else:
pass
except:
break #if user pressed other than the given key the loop will break
import keyboard # using module keyboard
while True: # making a loop
try: # used try so that if user pressed other than the given key error will not be shown
if keyboard.is_pressed('q'): # if key 'q' is pressed
print('You Pressed A Key!')
break # finishing the loop
except:
break # if user pressed a key other than the given key the loop will break
import pyautogui
pyautogui.press('shift')
pip3 install keyboard
install the pyautogui module by writing 'pip install pyautogui' to cmd. Some features:
import pyautogui as pg
pg.press("Enter") #presses enter
pg.write("Its so cool") #writes whatever you want
You can make a spam bot using this in a loop! But, just dont...