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I have a simple program that does the following: 1) User points a mouse somewhere, 2) then user presses Space, 3) and computer does certain amount of left-botton-mouse-clicks at that point.

The program works fine, there is only one problem - it eats 30-50% of processor time on a 4-core processor. Where is the problem?

import pyautogui
import ctypes

pyautogui.FAILSAFE = True

def get_space_state():
    hllDll = ctypes.WinDLL ("User32.dll")
    VK_SPACE = 0x20
    return hllDll.GetKeyState(VK_SPACE)

while True:
    if get_space_state() == -127 or get_space_state() == -128:
        print ("yes")
        pyautogui.click(clicks=40 , interval=0.01) 

Thanks a lot.

1 Answer 1

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Correct answer: I suspect a constant polling because of while True:. Insert sleep or pyautogui.PAUSE there (inside while loop, before if), if process sleeps for a while (even less then a second) it frees a lot of CPU cycles

Minor optimizations: Also you're initializing entire User32.dll in every loop... twice (because of or), it seems. And User32 is HUGE

Hints and notes:

If I remember python rules right, you just can move hllDll to a module level (above function defintion), get_space_state() will find it anyway. Or you can pass it as a parameter. And you don't need to redefine VK_SPACE every function call - though this is a micro-optimization

If all these fixes won't work, you should use debuggers, to find a true source of slowdowns

If you happen to have problems like this in the future, use something like Immunity or WinDbg to attach to process and see what's going on there

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  • Thanks for your answer. 1) How and where should I insert "sleep"? 2) about "twice" - I changed to "if get_space_state() < 0:" - nothing improved. 3) Do you know the way to initialize NOT entire User32.dll - but the only needed part of it?
    – User New
    May 22, 2016 at 12:00
  • sadly, though, no, I don't know how to export a single function, but it will not matter much if you'll just export lib once - on loading May 22, 2016 at 12:13
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    You are RIGHT. The problem is solved with only one line: "time.sleep(0.02)" inserted before "if". Everything else doesn't matter at all.
    – User New
    May 22, 2016 at 14:30
  • It could matter but only on a very high-load processing, I guess, which is not an option for a simple clicker :) May 22, 2016 at 14:36

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