I need to test my Windows app using touch events but don't have a touch screen available.
Microsoft.Windows.Simulator.exe
Located in C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\Microsoft Shared\Windows Simulator\16.0\Microsoft.Windows.Simulator.exe
The Simulator has modes that allow for basic touch events using the mouse, as well as pinch-to-zoom, and 2 finger rotation. It simulates your current Windows machine so you can even open up your code in VS, run your app, and set breakpoints that would normally only hit when using touch events.
Edit: based on the comment of Luishg, you need to install both Visual Studio and the Visual Studio UWP package for the Simulator to be installed.
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@ПетърПетров Did the version number possibly increase? When I first posted this answer it was
14.0
, someone later added an edit to make it15.0
. I don't have a Windows machine handy to test this. – BigHeadCreations Feb 1 '19 at 10:05 -
3It is 16.0 (C:\Program Files (x86)\Common Files\microsoft shared\Windows Simulator\16.0) now with visual studio 2019. The version was accordingly to the visual studio version in which you installed the UWP package. If you had 2017 it was 15.0. and so on backwards. – Luishg Apr 5 '19 at 13:25
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Does anyone know how to install Simulator.exe if it's no longer part of Windows 10? – I.Step May 14 '20 at 9:30
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@I.Step Just a guess but based on the comment of Luishg, try installing Visual Studio. – BigHeadCreations May 26 '20 at 10:21
You can actually launch this from visual studio now: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/visualstudio/debugger/run-windows-store-apps-in-the-simulator?view=vs-2019
Set the simulator as the target
To run your UWP app in the simulator, select Simulator from the drop-down list next to the Start Debugging button on the debugger Standard toolbar. This option is only available if your app's Target Platform Min. Version is less than or equal to the operating system on your development machine.
PS. mine didnt actually work first time I had to reboot my pc to get it working