What It Does
GesturePoint(point, delayMs?, durationMs?) performs one focused job in script flow and can be chained cleanly with other API steps. Defines start and end points for a swipe gesture.
Defines start and end points for a swipe gesture.
This section explains when to use the API, how to call it, and which structures it works best with in production flow.
GesturePoint(point, delayMs?, durationMs?) performs one focused job in script flow and can be chained cleanly with other API steps. Defines start and end points for a swipe gesture.
In automation flow, chain actions with short wait() intervals and use requestStop() or controlled retry on failure paths. This API becomes most valuable in touch and control-panel centric scenarios.
point, delayMs, durationMs define the purpose of the call; preparing them in clearly named variables before execution makes production debugging easier. The safest usage pattern is to store the call result in a variable, wrap it with pcall, and pass it into later steps in a controlled way.
It works best together with wait(), Point, SwipeParam, ClickParam, and sometimes a Region result.
The snippet below is a starter pattern that can be applied directly in runtime flow.
local sp = GesturePoint(Point(540, 1500), 0, 300)From foundation to combined usage, each level is provided as a separate code block so you can copy the level you need and adapt it directly.
Shows the shortest direct way to call the API.
local sp = GesturePoint(Point(540, 1500), 0, 300)Wraps the base call with minimal flow control.
local stepOk = true
local sp = GesturePoint(Point(540, 1500), 0, 300)
if stepOk then
wait(200)
endA practical pattern for real macros with pcall, logging, and guards.
local ok, result = pcall(function()
local sp = GesturePoint(Point(540, 1500), 0, 300)
end)
if not ok then
print("API step failed: GesturePoint(point, delayMs?, durationMs?)")
requestStop()
endThis level packages the API into a reusable helper with error reporting.
-- In automation flow, chain actions with short wait() intervals and use requestStop() or controlled retry on failure paths.
local function run_gesturepoint_step()
local sp = GesturePoint(Point(540, 1500), 0, 300)
end
local ok, err = pcall(run_gesturepoint_step)
if not ok then
toast("Step failed")
print(err)
endCombines the API with related structures to form a more realistic workflow.
local target = Point(540, 960)
quickTap(target)
wait(250)
local sp = GesturePoint(Point(540, 1500), 0, 300)
wait(250)
print("Automation chain completed")