aomiit / Python-UIAutomation-for-Windows

:snake:Python 3 wrapper of Microsoft UIAutomation. Support UIAutomation for MFC, WindowsForm, WPF, Modern UI(Metro UI), Qt(partly), IE, Firefox, Chrome ... :star: :star: :star:

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The uiautomation module

🇨🇳中文版介绍

This module is for UIAutomation on Windows(Windows XP with SP3, Windows Vista, Windows 7 and Windows 8/8.1/10). It supports UIAutomation for the applications which implmented UIAutomation Provider, such as MFC, Windows Form, WPF, Modern UI(Metro UI), Qt(Partly), Firefox(version<=56 or >=60) and Chrome(requires --force-renderer-accessibility command line parameter).

I developed it in my spare time and for my personal use.

uiautomation is shared under the Apache Licence 2.0.
This means that the code can be freely copied and distributed, and costs nothing to use.

uiautomation1.x supports py2, py3 and doesn't depend on any third package.

uiautomation2.0+ only supports py3 and depends on comtypes and typing(Python3.5+ built-in).
uiautomation2.0+ is not backward compatible with early versions. See API changes.

You can install uiautomation by "pip install uiautomation". After installation, a automation.py that calls uiautomation will be in 'C:\PythonXX\Scripts'. You use this script to traverse UI controls.

Run 'C:\PythonXX\Scripts\automation.py -h' for help.
Run demos\automation_calculator.py to see a simple demo.

On Windows 8/8.1, to automate a Metro App, the app must be in foreground. If a Metro App was switched to background, uiautomation can't fetch its controls' information.

By the way, You should run python as administrator. Otherwise uiautomation may fail to enumerate controls or get controls' information on Windows 7 or higher.

Requirements:

Microsoft UIAutomation Minimum supported client: Windows 7, Windows Vista with SP2 and Platform Update for Windows Vista, Windows XP with SP3 and Platform Update for Windows Vista [desktop apps only]

Microsoft UIAutomation Minimum supported server: Windows Server 2008 R2, Windows Server 2008 with SP2 and Platform Update for Windows Server 2008, Windows Server 2003 with SP2 and Platform Update for Windows Server 2008 [desktop apps only]

C++ dll source code: UIAutomationClient


How to use uiautomation? run 'automation.py -h' help

Understand the arguments of automation.py, and try the following examples:
automation.py -t 0 -n, print current active window's controls, show fullname
automation.py -r -d 1 -t 0, print desktop(the root of control tree) and it's children(top level windows)

top level windows

automation.py prints the properties of controls and the patterns they support. You use controls and patterns to get controls' information and operate them.

A control should support some patterns or conditionally supports some patterns according to its control type.

patterns

Refer Control Pattern Mapping for UI Automation Clients for the full control pattern table.

uiautomation searches controls from the control tree based on the controls' properties you supply.

Suppose the control tree is

root(Name='Desktop', Depth=0)
window1(Depth=1)
control1-001(Depth=2)
control1-...(Depth=2)
...
control1-100(Depth=2)
window2(Name='window2', Depth=1)
control2-1(Depth=2)
control2-1-001(Depth=3)
control2-1-...(Depth=3)
...
control2-1-100(Depth=3)
control2-2(Depth=2)
control2-3(Depth=2)
control2-4(Name='2-4', Depth=2)
editcontrol(Name='myedit1', Depth=3)
editcontrol(Name='myedit2', Depth=3)

If you want to find the EditControl whose name is 'myedit2' and type 'hi',
you can write the following code:

uiautomation.EditControl(searchDepth=3, Name='myedit2').SendKeys('hi')

But this code run slowly because there are more than 200 controls before myedit2 in the control tree.
uiautomation has to traverse more than 200 controls before finding myedit2 if search from root in 3 search depth.
The better is:

window2 = uiautomation.WindowControl(searchDepth=1, Name='window2') # search 2 times
sub = window2.Control(searchDepth=1, Name='2-4')    # search 4 times
edit = sub.EditControl(searchDepth=1, Name='myedit2')   # search 2 times
edit.SendKeys('hi')

This code run faster than the former.
You can also combine the four lines code into one line.

uiautomation.WindowControl(searchDepth=1, Name='window2').Control(searchDepth=1, Name='2-4').EditControl(searchDepth=1, Name='myedit2').SendKeys('hi')

Now let's take notepad.exe for an example.
Luanch notepad.exe and run automation.py -t 3, then swith to Notepad and wait for 5 seconds

automation.py will print the controls of Notepad and save them to @AutomationLog.txt:

ControlType: PaneControl ClassName: #32769 Name: 桌面 Depth: 0 (Desktop window, the root control)
ControlType: WindowControl ClassName: Notepad Depth: 1 (Top level window)
ControlType: EditControl ClassName: Edit Depth: 2
ControlType: ScrollBarControl ClassName: Depth: 3
ControlType: ButtonControl ClassName: Depth: 4
ControlType: ButtonControl ClassName: Depth: 4
ControlType: ThumbControl ClassName: Depth: 3
ControlType: TitleBarControl ClassName: Depth: 2
ControlType: MenuBarControl ClassName: Depth: 3
ControlType: MenuItemControl ClassName: Depth: 4
ControlType: ButtonControl ClassName: Name: 最小化 Depth: 3 (Minimize Button)
ControlType: ButtonControl ClassName: Name: 最大化 Depth: 3 (Maximize Button)
ControlType: ButtonControl ClassName: Name: 关闭 Depth: 3 (Close Button)
...

Run the following code

# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
import subprocess
import uiautomation as auto

print(auto.GetRootControl())
subprocess.Popen('notepad.exe')
# you should find the top level window first, then find children from the top level window
notepadWindow = auto.WindowControl(searchDepth=1, ClassName='Notepad')
print(notepadWindow.Name)
notepadWindow.SetTopmost(True)
# find the first EditControl in notepadWindow
edit = notepadWindow.EditControl()
# use value pattern to get or set value
edit.GetValuePattern().SetValue('Hello')# or edit.GetPattern(auto.PatternId.ValuePattern)
edit.SendKeys('{Ctrl}{End}{Enter}World')
# find the first TitleBarControl in notepadWindow, 
# then find the second ButtonControl in TitleBarControl, which is the Maximize button
notepadWindow.TitleBarControl().ButtonControl(foundIndex=2).Click()
# find the first button in notepadWindow whose Name is '关闭', the close button
# the relative depth from Close button to Notepad window is 2
notepadWindow.ButtonControl(searchDepth=2, Name='关闭').Click()
# then notepad will popup a window askes you to save or not, press hotkey alt+n not to save
auto.SendKeys('{Alt}n')

automation.GetRootControl() returns the root control(the Desktop window)
automation.WindowControl(searchDepth=1, ClassName='Notepad') creates a WindowControl, the parameters specify how to search the control
the following parameters can be used
searchFromControl = None,
searchDepth = 0xFFFFFFFF,
searchWaitTime = SEARCH_INTERVAL,
foundIndex = 1
Name
SubName
RegexName
ClassName
AutomationId
ControlType
Depth
Compare

See Control.__init__ for the comments of the parameters.
See scripts in folder demos for more examples.

If automation.py can't print the controls you see. Maybe the controls were built by DirectUI(or CustomControl), not UI Frameworks supplied by Microsoft. In order to support UIAutomation, an UI Framework must implement UI Automation Provider.

A Microsoft UI Automation provider is a software object that exposes an element of an application's UI so that accessibility client applications can retrieve information about the element and invoke its functionality. In general, each control or other distinct element in a UI has a provider.

Microsoft includes a provider for each of the standard controls that are supplied with Microsoft Win32, Windows Forms, and Windows Presentation Foundation (WPF). This means that the standard controls are automatically exposed to UI Automation clients; you do not need to implement any accessibility interfaces for the standard controls.

If your application includes any custom controls, you need to implement UI Automation providers for those controls to make them accessible to accessibility client applications. You also need to implement providers for any third party controls that do not include a provider. You implement a provider by implementing UI Automation provider interfaces and control pattern interfaces.


Another UI tool Inspect.exe supplied by Microsoft can also be used to traverse the UI elements. It has an UI interface while my script shows UI elements in terminal. But I found that my script is more convenient sometimes.

Inspect


Some screenshots:

Batch rename pdf bookmark bookmark

Microsoft Word Word

Qt5 Qt5

QQ QQ

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About

:snake:Python 3 wrapper of Microsoft UIAutomation. Support UIAutomation for MFC, WindowsForm, WPF, Modern UI(Metro UI), Qt(partly), IE, Firefox, Chrome ... :star: :star: :star:

License:Apache License 2.0


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