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I want to write app, which will work like a daemon and on some global keystroke paste some text to current active application (text editor, browser, jabber client) I think i will need to use some low level xserver api. How i can do this with Python or C++ ?

+1  A: 

Probably you want to hack xmon...


AFAIK there is no easy way to hook the X protocol. You will need to do "deep packet inspection", which would be fairly easy in the application event loop but not so easy, as you want, "like a daemon", or on "global keystroke[s]".

So, I know this is really brute force and ignorance, but I think you will have to wrap the X server by starting it on a non-standard port or publishing an environment variable, just like you were using something like an SSH tunnel to forward an X server connection.

There is an X protocol monitor called Xmon for which source is available. It might be a good starting point.

DigitalRoss
A: 

You can use the xmacroplay utility from xmacro to do this under X windows I think. Either use it directly - send it commands to standard input using the subprocess module, or read the source code and find out how it does it! I don't think there are python bindings for it.

From the xmacroplay website

xmacroplay:
Reads lines from the standard input. It can understand the following lines:

Delay [sec]  - delays the program with [sec] secundums
ButtonPress [n] - sends a ButtonPress event with button [n]
    this emulates the pressing of the mouse button [n]
ButtonRelease [n]   - sends a ButtonRelease event with button [n]
    this emulates the releaseing of the mouse button [n]
... snip lots more ...

This is probably the command you are interested in

String [max. 1024 long string]
  - Sends the string as single characters converted to
    KeyPress and KeyRelease events based on a
    character table in chartbl.h (currently only
    Latin1 is used...)

There is also Xnee which does a similar thing.

Nick Craig-Wood