N4rk0 Posted October 25, 2008 Posted October 25, 2008 (edited) I would like to run a script from a string without creating a file . So i know that it's possible to write a script file and then launch it with the autoit interpreter but i would like to avoid creating the file on the hard disk.... is it possible? Edited October 25, 2008 by N4rk0
Marlo Posted October 25, 2008 Posted October 25, 2008 Go and have a look in the example scripts forum. there are multiple scripts that do this. Click here for the best AutoIt help possible.Currently Working on: Autoit RAT
N4rk0 Posted October 25, 2008 Author Posted October 25, 2008 /AutoIt3ExecuteScript No , read better my post ... Compiled.exe [/ErrorStdOut] [/AutoIt3ExecuteScript file] [params ...] With /AutoIt3ExecuteScript u need to write a file to hard disk , and i don't want to write file to hard disk...
martin Posted October 25, 2008 Posted October 25, 2008 Go and have a look in the example scripts forum. there are multiple scripts that do this. Can you give a link to just one of them?@PainExecuting one line is a too limited. How would you deal with OnEvent mode, or loops, select, switch, if then/else? Serial port communications UDF Includes functions for binary transmission and reception.printing UDF Useful for graphs, forms, labels, reports etc.Add User Call Tips to SciTE for functions in UDFs not included with AutoIt and for your own scripts.Functions with parameters in OnEvent mode and for Hot Keys One function replaces GuiSetOnEvent, GuiCtrlSetOnEvent and HotKeySet.UDF IsConnected2 for notification of status of connected state of many urls or IPs, without slowing the script.
N4rk0 Posted October 25, 2008 Author Posted October 25, 2008 How about /AutoIt3ExecuteLine then?It execute only one line , maybe i have to try to execute a string ofmore lines but i doubt that it can work ....
N4rk0 Posted October 27, 2008 Author Posted October 27, 2008 so i should assume that it's not possible ?
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now