Sorry for not replying sooner. Macros can be very complex, and they can take into account things like racial spells, trinkets, items in bags, etc., so macros can be highly specific to not just class but spec, talents, race, equipment, items, etc. You can find basic macros online, but more complicated macros are unlikely to be usable. The "ideal" macro is just a macro that suits your needs, and that can be anything.
Also maybe I try to handle too much) about 5-6 enemies 18-19 lvl vs 16 lvl party is my limit I think, and in the end I should go mele), maybe I need a tank, healers aren't a big deal I think as there is 1 powerful ability and it works well for now.
You're leveling in Wrath where the mobs are harder than MoP, so it will probably take longer in your case, and battles will be more difficult. Approach it the same way you do leveling solo and pull mobs carefully, don't go leeroy jenkins just because you're boxing.
low lvl of team(so no quests on locations)
What do you mean no quests? You can do quests with a team, though there's certain kinds you should avoid like gathering quests.
how much time do you usually spend to lvl 1 party?
I don't speed-level like some people around here, I take my time and I don't play every day so it's hard to say. If I really pushed it I could probably hit level cap in 2-3 days, but keep in mind I'm on Frostwolf with x7 XP. It would take longer on Lord with x1 XP and harder mobs.
Macros aren't hard but you need to read a guide to really understand them, not just by looking at examples. They have a lot of features and they can have quirks you need to know. It's also possible they could work a bit different on Wrath, so keep that in mind. Read these guides:
https://wow.gamepedia.com/Making_a_macro
https://macro-wow.com/guide/full-lis...-conditionals/
As with everything in multiboxing there is no one way to do macros. You can have very specific macros, or you could do like me and have a few combat macros you can spam and some specific ones for special abilities. If you're doing the same class you could probably do more specific macros easier since you're mostly working with the same abilities on all toons.
In my setup I have all followers set the leader as focus, so all macros target the leader's target using focus by beginning with this:
Code:
/target focustarget
This does what it says on the tin: The toon targets the focus's target before doing anything else in the macro.
While leveling I like to have "attack macros" that I can just spam. You can put basic rotations in macros with castsequence like this:
Code:
/target focustarget
/castsequence reset=combat/target Revealing Strike,Sinister Strike,Sinister Strike
Macros can take into account your toon's state and whether you're pressing modifier keys. Here is a full attack macro for my solo rogue:
Code:
/use [stealth,mod:shift]Pick Pocket
/use [stealth,nomod]Ambush
/castsequence [nostealth]reset=combat/target Revealing Strike,Sinister Strike,Sinister Strike
It works top to bottom: If toon is stealthed and I'm pressing shift, it does Pick Pocket and skips the rest. If stealth and no mod keys pressed, Ambush. Otherwise does my usual rotation.
When classes have resources that build I like to have two attack macros, one that builds the resource and the other that uses it. The above macro builds combo points and this one spends them:
Code:
/castsequence reset=combat Slice and Dice,Eviscerate
This is important because if a castsequence can't do the next item for some reason, such as you don't have combo points or energy or cooldown or whatever, it just stops there and the toon does nothing until the ability is usable or the castsequence resets, so separating resource building and resource using abilities into two buttons helps prevent toons from getting stuck in their castsequences.
I'm not going to write a huge tutorial on how to use macros because those already exist and you should read the links I put above and experiment with macros at target dummies to see how they work. Instead I'll give you a macro to study from one of my druids since they're the biggest and most complex macros I use.
Macro conditionals also work with forms and stances, so I have a single macro that handles every form of my druid:
Code:
/target focustarget
/castsequence [form:1,harm]reset=target/combat/8 Faerie Swarm,Mangle,Lacerate,Thrash,Maul,Mangle,Thrash,Mangle,Thrash,Mangle,Thrash
/use [form:1,harm]Growl
/use [form:1]Might of Ursoc
/use [form:1,harm]Bear Hug
/use [form:3,stealth]Pounce
/castsequence [form:3,harm]reset=target/combat Faerie Swarm,Rake,Ferocious Bite,Thrash,Mangle,Mangle,Rake,Ferocious Bite,Thrash
/castsequence [noform,harm]reset=target/combat Faerie Swarm,Moonfire,Wrath,Wrath,Wrath,Wrath,Wrath
/castsequence [nocombat,help,dead]Revive;[combat,help,dead] Rebirth;[help][@focus,exists]reset=target/combat Rejuvenation,Remove Corruption,Healing Touch,Healing Touch
Form 1 is Bear
Form 3 is Cat
Noform is self explanatory
This is an old macro that mixes resource building and spending abilities, but if that's what you want to do it's an example of how you might go about it. The very last line is for healing and reviving so this is also a healing macro when targeting friendlies. What it does depends on whether I'm in combat and whether my target is dead, I'll let you figure it out.
This is obviously big and complex, but the fewer buttons I have to think about pressing the better. I put each toon's attack macros on the same keys and spam them, so they do their rotation no matter what class they are. It might not be perfectly efficient but it gets the job done.
Aside from my spammable attack macros I have some utilities like stealthing, interrupts, buffs, etc.
Haven't seen multiboxers on my server at all. I thought it might be the reason, but also thought it can't be because of amount of this kind of people. Just funny, one says "oh maan, u're amazing" but another people just passing by and say "uu u're multiboxer, get lost."
You changed my opinion about multiboxing. I thought it's wery unpopular thing, and actually it is. But there's no much guides not because it's so unpopular, but because there's no right or wrong way to do something.
I always /salute other multiboxers when I see them with their team, but I don't see them often. lol
I think multiboxing is popular but it's also complicated and hard to figure out so many people don't know how to do it. It's not just login and go, you need to know how to setup and use key broadcasting software or something else, then you need to know macros and addons like Jamba to setup your characters, etc. So only people who are computer geeks or very determined can figure out how to do it, and that's probably why more people don't multibox.