Windowed fullscreen is preffered.
---------- Post added at 01:06 AM ---------- Previous post was at 12:59 AM ----------
I'll explain how my bot does its bob detection and how it detects when it has a fish.
An example
The black circle is where the mouse initially hits the bobber and detects that the bobber is in that general area.
It then travels left from that point, pixel by pixel until it detects the left edge of the bobber. It notes that location.
It then goes back to that initial point and travels right and detects the right edge of the bober.
Now knowing the edges of the bobber it knows the middle of the bobber.
From the middle of the bobber it travels to the top of it, pixel by pixel until it reaches the tippity top.
This is why its essential to be close to the water level (so it detects the up and down movement of the bob when a fish bites)
When the fish bites, the bob goes down and the fish hook cursor goes away temporarily, and this is how the program knows when a fish bites.
It then waits for the bob to come back up and shift right clicks it.
If there is any error during that process it times out and restarts.
Here is the bob detect fxn I made
Code:
int IsBob(HDC dc,int x,int y,int pause){
SetCursorPos(x,y);
Sleep(pause);
if (GetPixel(dc,x+12,y+24)==dHookColor){
return 1;
}
return 0;
}
---------- Post added at 01:15 AM ---------- Previous post was at 01:06 AM ----------
Ok, so if I understand correctly, we have diffferent cursors? If thats the case then my x and y offsets from the cursor might not be compatible with yours (it might detect the scenery instead of the cursor).
Please post a picture of your mouse hovering over a bob. This would help a lot.
---------- Post added at 01:32 AM ---------- Previous post was at 01:15 AM ----------
Also to help out with troubleshooting, this is how it is supposed to work wangler - YouTube