Touchscreens know when you touch them because they have special layers that can feel your finger like a sensor.
Imagine you're playing with a sheet of sticky tape and a piece of paper. When you press the paper onto the tape, it sticks, and if you lift it up, it leaves a mark. That’s kind of what happens on a touchscreen!
How the screen feels your touch
Touchscreens have layers under the glass, like the layers in a sandwich. One layer is special: it can feel when something touches it. When your finger presses down, it changes how electricity flows through that layer.
It's like when you press on a balloon, you squish it and change its shape. The screen uses this change to know where your finger is. Then the phone or tablet knows to show what you're touching, like a letter or a picture.
How the screen tells the phone what you did
Once the screen feels your touch, it sends a message to the phone, kind of like telling a friend when you tap on something. The phone reads that message and shows the right thing on the screen!
So, even though it seems quick and easy, there’s a whole little team working behind the glass to make your finger’s touch come alive!
Examples
- A child taps on a tablet to play a game.
- Someone swipes their finger across the phone screen.
- You press a button on a smartwatch.
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See also
- How Do Touchscreens Actually Work?
- What is lidar?
- How Can A Single Button Change Your Whole Life?
- How Do Holograms Make People Look Like They’re Floating?
- How Do Computers Remember Everything?