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I've discovered the Robot class today and wanted to use it to do some funny scripts...

I want to convert a String into KeyEvent to do something like this :

writeKeyboard(myBot,"abcd");

public void writeKeyboard(Robot bot, String st){
     char[] arr = arr.toCharArray();
     int i = arr.length();
     int j = 0;
     int keycode;
     while (j<i) {
         keycode = arr[j].something;
         bot.keyPress(keycode);
         bot.keyRelease(keycode);
         j++;
     }
}
share|improve this question
Good question, I have been trying to figure this out for a while... – Adam Paynter Aug 8 '09 at 10:25
I don't think there is a simple answer for this. A similar question has been asked before here: stackoverflow.com/questions/664896/… – Aaron Aug 8 '09 at 10:52

10 Answers

up vote 20 down vote accepted

I'm basically using a glorified switch statement. Simple and fast:

public class Keyboard {

    private Robot robot;

    public static void main(String... args) throws Exception {
    	Keyboard keyboard = new Keyboard();
    	keyboard.type("Hello there, how are you?");
    }

    public Keyboard() throws AWTException {
    	this.robot = new Robot();
    }

    public Keyboard(Robot robot) {
    	this.robot = robot;
    }

    public void type(CharSequence characters) {
    	int length = characters.length();
    	for (int i = 0; i < length; i++) {
    		char character = characters.charAt(i);
    		type(character);
    	}
    }

    public void type(char character) {
    	switch (character) {
    	case 'a': doType(VK_A); break;
    	case 'b': doType(VK_B); break;
    	case 'c': doType(VK_C); break;
    	case 'd': doType(VK_D); break;
    	case 'e': doType(VK_E); break;
    	case 'f': doType(VK_F); break;
    	case 'g': doType(VK_G); break;
    	case 'h': doType(VK_H); break;
    	case 'i': doType(VK_I); break;
    	case 'j': doType(VK_J); break;
    	case 'k': doType(VK_K); break;
    	case 'l': doType(VK_L); break;
    	case 'm': doType(VK_M); break;
    	case 'n': doType(VK_N); break;
    	case 'o': doType(VK_O); break;
    	case 'p': doType(VK_P); break;
    	case 'q': doType(VK_Q); break;
    	case 'r': doType(VK_R); break;
    	case 's': doType(VK_S); break;
    	case 't': doType(VK_T); break;
    	case 'u': doType(VK_U); break;
    	case 'v': doType(VK_V); break;
    	case 'w': doType(VK_W); break;
    	case 'x': doType(VK_X); break;
    	case 'y': doType(VK_Y); break;
    	case 'z': doType(VK_Z); break;
    	case 'A': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_A); break;
    	case 'B': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_B); break;
    	case 'C': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_C); break;
    	case 'D': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_D); break;
    	case 'E': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_E); break;
    	case 'F': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_F); break;
    	case 'G': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_G); break;
    	case 'H': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_H); break;
    	case 'I': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_I); break;
    	case 'J': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_J); break;
    	case 'K': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_K); break;
    	case 'L': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_L); break;
    	case 'M': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_M); break;
    	case 'N': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_N); break;
    	case 'O': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_O); break;
    	case 'P': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_P); break;
    	case 'Q': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_Q); break;
    	case 'R': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_R); break;
    	case 'S': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_S); break;
    	case 'T': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_T); break;
    	case 'U': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_U); break;
    	case 'V': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_V); break;
    	case 'W': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_W); break;
    	case 'X': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_X); break;
    	case 'Y': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_Y); break;
    	case 'Z': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_Z); break;
    	case '`': doType(VK_BACK_QUOTE); break;
    	case '0': doType(VK_0); break;
    	case '1': doType(VK_1); break;
    	case '2': doType(VK_2); break;
    	case '3': doType(VK_3); break;
    	case '4': doType(VK_4); break;
    	case '5': doType(VK_5); break;
    	case '6': doType(VK_6); break;
    	case '7': doType(VK_7); break;
    	case '8': doType(VK_8); break;
    	case '9': doType(VK_9); break;
    	case '-': doType(VK_MINUS); break;
    	case '=': doType(VK_EQUALS); break;
    	case '~': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_BACK_QUOTE); break;
    	case '!': doType(VK_EXCLAMATION_MARK); break;
    	case '@': doType(VK_AT); break;
    	case '#': doType(VK_NUMBER_SIGN); break;
    	case '$': doType(VK_DOLLAR); break;
    	case '%': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_5); break;
    	case '^': doType(VK_CIRCUMFLEX); break;
    	case '&': doType(VK_AMPERSAND); break;
    	case '*': doType(VK_ASTERISK); break;
    	case '(': doType(VK_LEFT_PARENTHESIS); break;
    	case ')': doType(VK_RIGHT_PARENTHESIS); break;
    	case '_': doType(VK_UNDERSCORE); break;
    	case '+': doType(VK_PLUS); break;
    	case '\t': doType(VK_TAB); break;
    	case '\n': doType(VK_ENTER); break;
    	case '[': doType(VK_OPEN_BRACKET); break;
    	case ']': doType(VK_CLOSE_BRACKET); break;
    	case '\\': doType(VK_BACK_SLASH); break;
    	case '{': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_OPEN_BRACKET); break;
    	case '}': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_CLOSE_BRACKET); break;
    	case '|': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_BACK_SLASH); break;
    	case ';': doType(VK_SEMICOLON); break;
    	case ':': doType(VK_COLON); break;
    	case '\'': doType(VK_QUOTE); break;
    	case '"': doType(VK_QUOTEDBL); break;
    	case ',': doType(VK_COMMA); break;
    	case '<': doType(VK_LESS); break;
    	case '.': doType(VK_PERIOD); break;
    	case '>': doType(VK_GREATER); break;
    	case '/': doType(VK_SLASH); break;
    	case '?': doType(VK_SHIFT, VK_SLASH); break;
    	case ' ': doType(VK_SPACE); break;
    	default:
    		throw new IllegalArgumentException("Cannot type character " + character);
    	}
    }

    private void doType(int... keyCodes) {
    	doType(keyCodes, 0, keyCodes.length);
    }

    private void doType(int[] keyCodes, int offset, int length) {
    	if (length == 0) {
    		return;
    	}

    	robot.keyPress(keyCodes[offset]);
    	doType(keyCodes, offset + 1, length - 1);
    	robot.keyRelease(keyCodes[offset]);
    }

}

If you want some custom key typing, you can extend the class and override the type(char) method. For example:

public class WindowUnicodeKeyboard extends Keyboard {

    private Robot robot;

    public WindowUnicodeKeyboard(Robot robot) {
    	super(robot);
    	this.robot = robot;
    }

    @Override
    public void type(char character) {
    	try {
    		super.type(character);
    	} catch (IllegalArgumentException e) {
    		String unicodeDigits = String.valueOf(Character.getCodePoint(character));
    		robot.keyPress(VK_ALT);
    		for (int i = 0; i < unicodeDigits.length(); i++) {
    			typeNumPad(Integer.parseInt(unicodeDigits.substring(i, i + 1)));
    		}
    		robot.keyRelease(VK_ALT);
    	}
    }

    private void typeNumPad(int digit) {
    	switch (digit) {
    	case 0: doType(VK_NUMPAD0); break;
    	case 1: doType(VK_NUMPAD1); break;
    	case 2: doType(VK_NUMPAD2); break;
    	case 3: doType(VK_NUMPAD3); break;
    	case 4: doType(VK_NUMPAD4); break;
    	case 5: doType(VK_NUMPAD5); break;
    	case 6: doType(VK_NUMPAD6); break;
    	case 7: doType(VK_NUMPAD7); break;
    	case 8: doType(VK_NUMPAD8); break;
    	case 9: doType(VK_NUMPAD9); break;
    	}
    }

}

There is, of course, room for improvement, but you get the idea.

share|improve this answer
this answer is great and saved my life (this morning)... thank you! – Yar Jan 3 '10 at 8:25
8  
Great example, remember when using this to have a static import for the key codes: import static java.awt.event.KeyEvent.*; – klogd Nov 12 '12 at 12:49
Excellent, thanks for the help! – Dax Mar 6 at 14:39

I used the clipboard to solve the problem...

public static void type(String characters) {
    Clipboard clipboard = Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getSystemClipboard();
    StringSelection stringSelection = new StringSelection( characters );
    clipboard.setContents(stringSelection, instance);

    robot.keyPress(KeyEvent.VK_CONTROL);
    robot.keyPress(KeyEvent.VK_V);
    robot.keyRelease(KeyEvent.VK_V);
    robot.keyRelease(KeyEvent.VK_CONTROL);
}
share|improve this answer

It's a bit of a Kludge, but you can use the Command pattern to encapsulate the keystrokes for each character in the String, then get the Command for each character in turn and invoke the method. The advantage of this is that you only have to set up the map once. The disadvantage is it still involves a bunch of bolierplate:

public interface Command {
    void pressKey(Robot bot);
}

//add a command to the map for each keystroke
commandMap.put("A", new Command() {
    void pressKey(Robot bot) {
        pressWithShift(KeyEvent.VK_A);
    }
});
commandMap.put("a", new Command() {
    void pressKey(Robot bot) {
        press(KeyEvent.VK_A);
    }
});
commandMap.put("B", new Command() {
    void pressKey(Robot bot) {
        pressWithShift(KeyEvent.VK_B);
    }
});
...
//loads more definitions here

//helper methods
private void pressWithShift(Robot bot, KeyEvent event) P
    bot.keyPress(KeyEvent.VK_SHIFT);
    press(bot, event);
    bot.keyRelase(KeyEvent.VK_SHIFT);
}

private void press(Robot bot, KeyEvent event) P
    bot.keyPress(event);
    bot.keyRelease(event);
}

Then to use the Map:

for (int i = 0; i < st.length(); i++) {
    String subString = st.substring(i, i + 1);

    commandMap.get(subString).pressKey(bot);
}
share|improve this answer
+1 this is the right approach but I think it needs too much boilderplate code – dfa Aug 8 '09 at 11:26
@dfa I do too, really this should all be done by some RobotHelper in my opinion. What would you do to reduce the boilerplate? – Rich Seller Aug 8 '09 at 11:35
please check my answer – dfa Aug 8 '09 at 12:14

I'm basically using the Command pattern as Rich Seller does in his answer, with two minor modifications for the brevity's sake:

  • use of the Decoration pattern for reusing instances of a-z command
  • use of reflection to remove KeyEvent.VK_???

Command interface:

interface Command {

    void pressKey(Robot robot);
}

and the decorator (for modification #1):

class ShiftCommand implements Command {

    private final Command command;

    public ShiftCommand(Command command) {
        this.command = command;
    }

    public void pressKey(Robot robot) {
        robot.keyPress(KeyEvent.VK_SHIFT);
        command.pressKey(robot);
        robot.keyRelease(KeyEvent.VK_SHIFT);
    }

    @Override
    public String toString() {
        return "SHIFT + " + command.toString();
    }
}

using this helper (for modification #2):

public static int getKeyEvent(Character c) {
    Field f = KeyEvent.class.getField("VK_" + Character.toUpperCase(c));
    f.setAccessible(true);
    return (Integer) f.get(null);
}

BEWARE: I'm not handling exceptions here, this is left as exercise for you :))

then populating the command using a for loop:

Map<Character, Command> commandMap = new HashMap<Character, Command>();

    for (int i = 'a'; i <= 'z'; i++) {
        final Character c = Character.valueOf((char) i);
        Command pressKeyCommand = new Command() {

            public void pressKey(Robot robot) {
                int keyEventCode = getKeyEvent(c);
                robot.keyPress(c);
                robot.keyRelease(c);
            }

            @Override
            public String toString() {
                return String.format("%c", c);
            }
        };

        // 'a' .. 'z'
        commandMap.put(c, pressKeyCommand);
        // 'A' .. 'Z' by decorating pressKeyCommand
        commandMap.put(Character.toUpperCase(c), new ShiftCommand(pressKeyCommand));
    }

TestCase

String test = "aaaBBB";
for (int i = 0; i < test.length(); i++) {
     System.out.println(commandMap.get(test.charAt(i)));
}

as expected this outputs:

a
a
a
SHIFT + b
SHIFT + b
SHIFT + b
share|improve this answer
how does this handle non-alpha characters? – Rich Seller Aug 8 '09 at 12:37
by simply adding new commands? – dfa Aug 8 '09 at 12:50
wasn't trying to be critical - I like the approach, but it's probably worth pointing out that you need to handle non-alpha keys in a similar manner to my answer – Rich Seller Aug 8 '09 at 14:24

Your code will work as long as you are using alpha numeric characters only, it will not work for characters like ":". SmartRobot class will handle this.

share|improve this answer
import java.awt.Robot;
import java.awt.event.KeyEvent;

/**
 * @author Trevor
 * Handles alpha numerics and common punctuation
 */
public class RobotKeyboard{

    private Robot robot;

    public RobotKeyboard(Robot robot){
        this.robot = robot;
    }

    public void typeMessage(String message){
        for (int i = 0; i < message.length(); i++){
            handleRepeatCharacter(message, i);
            type(message.charAt(i));
        }
    }

    private void handleRepeatCharacter(String message, int i){
        if(i == 0)
            return;
        //The robot won't type the same letter twice unless we release a key.
        if(message.charAt(i) == message.charAt(i-1)){
            robot.keyPress(KeyEvent.VK_SHIFT);
            robot.keyRelease(KeyEvent.VK_SHIFT);
        }
    }

    private void type(char character){
        handleSpecialCharacter(character);

        if (Character.isLowerCase(character)){
            typeCharacter(Character.toUpperCase(character));
        }
        if (Character.isUpperCase(character)){
            typeShiftCharacter(character);
        }
        if (Character.isDigit(character)){
            typeCharacter(character);
        }
    }

    private void handleSpecialCharacter(char character){
        if (character == ' ')
            typeCharacter(KeyEvent.VK_SPACE);
        if (character == '.')
            typeCharacter(KeyEvent.VK_PERIOD);
        if (character == '!')
            typeShiftCharacter(KeyEvent.VK_1);
        if (character == '?')
            typeShiftCharacter(KeyEvent.VK_SLASH);
        if (character == ',')
            typeCharacter(KeyEvent.VK_COMMA);

        //More specials here as needed
    }

    private void typeCharacter(int character){
        robot.keyPress(character);
    }

    private void typeShiftCharacter(int character){
        robot.keyPress(KeyEvent.VK_SHIFT);
        robot.keyPress(character);
        robot.keyRelease(KeyEvent.VK_SHIFT);
    }

}
share|improve this answer

This is how I managed to use all available keys. Create a Map and fill the map using the method fillKeyMap. Now you can use String representation of key events and convert it back into KeyEvent codes using the map.

/** Create map with string values to integer pairs
 */
public static final void fillKeyMap(Map<String, Integer> into) {
    try {
        Field[] fields = KeyEvent.class.getDeclaredFields();
        for(Field f : fields) {
            if(f.getName().startsWith("VK_")) { //we only want these fields
                int code = ((Integer)f.get(null)).intValue();
                into.put(f.getName().substring(3), code);
            }
        }
    } catch(Exception ex) {}
}
share|improve this answer

I don't know the commandmap method but looks good, I'll have a look.

Finally I discover that the keycode for a to z is 65 to 90. So

private void write(Robot bot, String st) {
	char[] arr = st.toCharArray();
	int i = arr.length;
	int j = 0;
	while (j<i) {
		int kcode = (int) arr[j] - 32;
		bot.keyPress(kcode);
		bot.keyRelease(kcode);
		j++;
	}		
}

It just works for lowercase letters (you can easily correct it with a simple test for uppercase).

For what I was looking for it works perfectly :-)

share|improve this answer
FYI: 65 is the ASCII code for 'A' (asciitable.com) – Adam Paynter Aug 8 '09 at 12:35
private static void typeOut (String s,Robot bot){
    char [] chars = s.toCharArray();
    foreach(char c : chars){
        bot.keyPress((int)c);
        bot.keyRelease((int)c);
    }
}

Is a neater solution.

share|improve this answer

I had the same issue. I found that the code below was a simple way to translate a string into key events. It seems that most people had very implementation specific fixes to account for the differences between lower & upper case. Because the VK keys don't care about upper/lower case, casting everything to upper case seems to fix the problem.

for(int i = 0; i < string.length(); i++){
    char c = Character.toUpperCase(s.charAt(i));
    KeyEvent ke = new KeyEvent(source, KeyEvent.KEY_PRESSED, System.currentTimeMillis(), 0, (int)c, c);
    //do whatever with key event
}

I also wanted to say this works well for letters and number, but it may not work for other characters. This technique translated the accent/backtick mark into numberpad 0 (VK_NUMPAD0)

share|improve this answer

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