PsaltyDS Posted July 23, 2010 Posted July 23, 2010 Will you handle the timing in the script, or do you want to put it in Task Scheduler? Either way, you can use Shutdown() in the script itself, or the one scheduled (see help file). Valuater's AutoIt 1-2-3, Class... Is now in Session!For those who want somebody to write the script for them: RentACoder"Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced." -- Geek's corollary to Clarke's law
NicePerson Posted July 24, 2010 Author Posted July 24, 2010 (edited) I want to handle the timing in the script. I tried this but not working While 1 If @HOUR = 3 And @MIN = 30 Then ExitLoop WEnd Shutdown(5) Edited July 24, 2010 by RMR
somdcomputerguy Posted July 24, 2010 Posted July 24, 2010 Add a Sleep statement. That might help. While 1 If @HOUR = 3 And @MIN = 30 And Then ExitLoop Sleep(100) WEnd Shutdown(5) - Bruce /*somdcomputerguy */ If you change the way you look at things, the things you look at change.
PsaltyDS Posted July 26, 2010 Posted July 26, 2010 I want to handle the timing in the script. I tried this but not working While 1 If @HOUR = 3 And @MIN = 30 Then ExitLoop WEnd Shutdown(5) That should work, though it needs a sleep to avoid sucking up all the CPU time, as somdcomputerguy pointed out. What context is the script running in? Any chance it doesn't have permission to do that? Valuater's AutoIt 1-2-3, Class... Is now in Session!For those who want somebody to write the script for them: RentACoder"Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced." -- Geek's corollary to Clarke's law
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