Repetitive tasks that involve multiple mouse clicking on a certain position of the screen can now be easily automated using OP Auto Clicker. This open source — and, therefore, completely free — tool will let you define a specific cursor position and make your mouse click repeatedly with the time interval of your choice and for as long as you need. Alternatively, its dynamic cursor support will let you tell the program to follow your cursor to perform the actions you set it to do.
This is a portable tool, it won't install on your computer just as software tools usually do. You just need to double-click on the executable file and the program's main window will appear on your screen. Thus, OP Auto Clicker is a lightweight tool that won't hardly take up any of your computer's resources. If you minimize the main window, the program will stay idle in the background waiting for the hotkey you defined to start clicking following your instructions.
You can configure your mouse autoclicking in various ways. First, you can define a time interval — in hours, minutes, seconds, and milliseconds — for your automated mouse clicking. You can tell it to repeat that action for as many times as you wish or tell it to go on until you stop it. Clicks can be single, double, and triple, and you can define which of the three mouse buttons will do the clicking.
You can tell OP Auto Clicker to follow your cursor or to perform the required task on a specific location. To do that, you can enter the X and Y coordinates yourself or move your cursor to that specific spot and click on it or press Esc to pick that specific point on the screen. Finally, you can record your autoclicking activity for later playback. Regrettably, there is apparently no way to group clicking tasks for more complicated chores.
This simple utility is simple, lightweight, and convenient. You never know when you'll be needing OP Auto Clicking to perform a tedious repetitive task, so I can see no reason why you shouldn't have its executable always at hand.
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