How to Configure WinScheduler Standard for Windows

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WinScheduler by Pitrinec Software is a dedicated Windows automation tool designed to create, manage, and execute macros across all your desktop applications. It goes beyond the capabilities of the built-in Windows Task Scheduler by integrating a powerful macro recorder and a native scripting language. Key Features of WinScheduler

Three-Pane User Interface: Keeps your workflow organized with a macro groups tree, a macro selection list, and an integrated macro editor pane.

Smart Macro Recorder: Records both keyboard keystrokes and mouse clicks in real time to capture manual processes easily.

Robust Macro Language: Features over 150 built-in commands handling file management, FTP transfers, ZIP compression, clipboard manipulation, and text encryption.

Integrated Debugger: Allows you to test and troubleshoot scripts inside the editor before deploying them.

Macro Security: Offers password protection and simple encryption to protect sensitive data inside your macro files. Advanced Event Triggers

While standard schedulers only look at time, WinScheduler can initiate actions based on real-world system behavior:

Time-Based Intervals: Run macros at specific times or loop them every X seconds, minutes, or hours.

File & Folder Changes: Trigger actions instantly when a file is created, deleted, or modified.

Window Detection: Execute tasks when a specific application window opens, closes, or gains focus.

Screen Pixel Recognition: Start a macro the exact moment a specific pixel color changes on your display.

System Hardware Status: Trigger cleanups when hard drive space runs low or during system idle time and Windows shutdowns. How to Build a Task in WinScheduler Launch the app from your Windows system tray.

Open the Add Wizard to create a step-by-step automation pipeline.

Name your task and choose whether it’s a recorded macro or written text command.

Select a trigger condition from the available time or event menus.

Save the file to immediately activate the automation engine in the background.

For a quick comparison, you can see how to configure basic, time-based automation scripts using the built-in Windows utility: If you want to dive deeper, tell me: What specific repetitive tasks are you trying to automate?

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