

In this mode, double-clicking works just as it would with a mouse: tap the same spot twice in quick succession.

The most useful tool available to our users is the Elo driver’s “Mouse emulation” mode, which can simulate the most common mouse features on our industrial touch screens. Mouse Emulation Mode: Double Clicking and Click-and-Drag Today’s post will cover one of the more commonly used touch screen mouse features.
#Elo touch screen driver windows 10 how to#
We’ve already talked about how to use your touch screen without a keyboard, but what about without an actual mouse? Thanks to a rich set of configuration options available in the Elo drivers supplied with all of our touch screens, these more advanced actions can be easily utilized. There are times however when a touch screen might be called to interface with the operating system and to perform functions that typically would require an actual mouse: right clicking, double clicking, click-to-drag, click and hold. To operate this type of application, the touch screen does no more than simply pass single “clicks” to the computer, which responds as if a mouse button was clicked. Generally, the user does not interface with the underlying PC operating system.

The programs that generate these automation interfaces are generally designed with a very simple interface: large on-screen buttons allow simple interaction to a busy, often gloved worker. In most typical applications, Hope Industrial touch screens are used to be part of a PC-based HMI configuration, performing some type of PC-based control of an industrial process. Elo Touch Screen Properties Control Panel
