Hi Bruce,

Okay, here's something which occurred to me which might save us all a lot of trouble, assuming I'm right about this.

Back in the bad ol' days, if you clicked on an icon on the desktop for a program which was already running, you ran the risk of opening a second copy of the program, such that it could destabilize the first instance of the program, and the second instance would be functionally useless as well.

Take GWConnect, as an example. I have it running, and when I go to the desktop, and press Enter on its icon, its program window comes to the foreground; I looked in the process list in the task manager, and I only see one process listed. Therefore, if I want a hotkey for the GWConnect window to come to the foreground, all I need to do is assign a hotkey to the desktop shortcut. The same was true when I tested my email client, Mozilla Thunderbird.

Now, I am running Windows 7 64-bit, and the behaviour I have described is either a feature of the operating system, or it is a result of an error-checking routine built into these two programs, that is, GWConnect and Mozilla Thunderbird.

I would appreciate any feedback on this subject.

Much thanks, and a Happy Christmas Eve, to all,

Rod

On 12/24/13 2:30 PM, LB wrote:
Hi!

     You could save those hotkeys in an .ini file and match the hotkey with the 
class/title of the window.

     I think that would be possible and I thought Chip had done something on it.

     In scripting just monitor the open window event and capture the name and 
other numbers you may need to use for the .ini file.
     I could test one out real quick if I don't get side track then post it on 
the list if it works.

         Bruce


Sent: Tuesday, December 24, 2013 2:00 PM
Subject: Re: Focusing Open Windows


Hi Rod,

I have used Autohotkey to make that Winlist program.
With Autohotkey you can do what you want, but with Window-Eyes scripting it 
must be possible too, but I cannot help you with that.

Oh, there is an app: Hotwind
by Chip Orange.
It is possible to assign hotkeys ctrl-1-9 to the windows that are open at that 
time.
Maybe something you want.
After each reboot, you have to reassign the hotkeys, because the program looks 
to open windows.

Regards, marten

Regards, Marten
On Tue, 24 Dec 2013 13:47:54 -0500 Rod Hutton <[email protected]> wrote:

Hi Martin,

Yes, thanks, that's the idea. Now, what I would like to be able to do is to 
assign a hot key to, say, my Mozilla Thunderbird and GWConnect windows, so that 
I could just flip to them when I want. I'm wondering what would be involved in 
making it possible to have permanent hot keys assigned to any detected windows, 
based upon Window Title and/or Class name.

I'm just contemplating the possibilities, but I certainly appreciate your 
sharing your app.

Take care,

Rod

On 12/24/13 12:28 PM, Marten Post Uiterweer wrote:
Rod,

Maybe this is not wat you are looking for, but I have made a small program to 
create such a list.
Start winlist.exe and you will get a list of open windows. Enter to focus the 
window.
It is not a Window-Eyes app, but you can start it from an app or by assigning a 
shortcut.
You can download it from:
http://www.p-u.demon.nl/winlist.zip

Regards, Marten
On Tue, 24 Dec 2013 12:14:52 -0500 Rod Hutton <[email protected]> wrote:

Hi,

Can anyone recommend a program or easy way to bring focus to one or more open 
windows using hot keys.  I could write an app to do it, but there's no point 
reinventing the wheel.

Thanks.

Rod


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