Description
Use the DblClick
action to simulate a double-click of the left mouse button over the object.
Declaration
TestObj.DblClick(ClientX, ClientY, Shift)
TestObj | A variable, parameter or expression that specifies a reference to one of the objects listed in the Applies To section | |||
ClientX | [in] | Optional | Integer | Default value: -1 |
ClientY | [in] | Optional | Integer | Default value: -1 |
Shift | [in] | Optional | TShiftKey | Default value: skNoShift |
Result | None |
Applies To
All onscreen objects.
View Mode
To view this method in the Object Browser panel and in other panels and dialogs, activate the Advanced view mode.
Parameters
The method has the following parameters:
ClientX
Specifies the horizontal coordinate of the point where the double-click should be simulated. This coordinate is relative to the object, it is not a screen coordinate. If ClientX is omitted, the double-click will be simulated in the center of the object.
ClientY
Specifies the vertical coordinate of the point where the double-click should be simulated. This coordinate is relative to the object, it is not a screen coordinate. If ClientX and ClientY parameters are omitted, the double-click will be simulated in the center of the object.
Shift
Sets whether the Shift, Alt or Ctrl keys are pressed during the double-click event (see TShiftKey). By default, this parameter is skNoShift
(no shift keys are pressed). Sometimes the Shift parameter may not be enough, and you may need to simulate key presses in script code. See Simulating Keystrokes.
Result Value
None.
Remarks
-
Desktop testing: If TestObj refers to an object of a non-DPI-aware application running with a DPI setting other than 100%, set the ClientX and ClientY parameter values relative to the application (as if the application is running with the 100% DPI setting).
-
Web testing: If the Use CSS pixels for scaled pages option is enabled (by default), set the ClientX and ClientY parameter values relative to the web page, regardless of the browser zoom and the system's DPI setting.
Example
The following example demonstrates how to use the DblClick
action in scripts:
JavaScript, JScript
var p, w;
p = Sys.Process("notepad");
w = p.Window("Notepad", "Untitled - Notepad", 0);
w = w.Window("Edit", "", 0);
w.DblClick(30, 40);
Python
p = Sys.Process("notepad")
w = p.Window("Notepad", "Untitled - Notepad", 0)
w = w.Window("Edit", "", 0)
w.DblClick(30, 40)
VBScript
Set p = Sys.Process("notepad")
Set w = p.Window("Notepad", "Untitled - Notepad", 0)
Set w = w.Window("Edit", "", 0)
w.DblClick 30, 40
DelphiScript
var
p, w : OleVariant;
begin
p := Sys.Process('notepad');
w := p.Window('Notepad', 'Untitled - Notepad', 0);
w := w.Window('Edit', '', 0);
w.DblClick(30, 40);
end;
C++Script, C#Script
var p, w;
p = Sys["Process"]("notepad");
w = p["Window"]("Notepad", "Untitled - Notepad", 0);
w = w["Window"]("Edit", "", 0);
w["DblClick"](30, 40);
See Also
Simulating User Actions
DblClickM Action
DblClickR Action
Click Action
Drag Action
MouseDown Method (Desktop Objects)
MouseUp Method (Desktop Objects)