I have many routines in my daily activities that need a dozen mouse clicks and a few choices to be performed. I tried "batch files", but I don't know how to feed data to them when a program is already running. I know certain programs have "macro" capabilities, but what about the ones that don't?
One example: almost daily, I dial a certain number, using a voip program. This operation involves: 1)Clicking on the icon of the voip program; 2)Clicking on the label "Contacts" (the program is loaded showing the label "Start"); 3)Clicking the contact I call daily; 4)Clicking on the button "Dial". Only after those four steps I get the phone ringing on the other side. Many, many years ago, I used on a Radio Shack TRS-80 Model I, my first microcomputer, an OS named NEWDOS/80. There, I could create a batch in which I could continue feeding data to a program after it was loaded. Explaining it another way, navigating in the OS and feeding data to a program could be done in the same batch file. Quite problem I missed some classes in the past, because I think it is difficult to accept the idea that Windows doesn't have this capability.
One example: almost daily, I dial a certain number, using a voip program. This operation involves: 1)Clicking on the icon of the voip program; 2)Clicking on the label "Contacts" (the program is loaded showing the label "Start"); 3)Clicking the contact I call daily; 4)Clicking on the button "Dial". Only after those four steps I get the phone ringing on the other side. Many, many years ago, I used on a Radio Shack TRS-80 Model I, my first microcomputer, an OS named NEWDOS/80. There, I could create a batch in which I could continue feeding data to a program after it was loaded. Explaining it another way, navigating in the OS and feeding data to a program could be done in the same batch file. Quite problem I missed some classes in the past, because I think it is difficult to accept the idea that Windows doesn't have this capability.