@Pete Just for your info - reason why "click through translucent window..."
With Windows 10 I OFTEN have issues with the Task Bar - it often does not automatically "hide" (despite flagging it to do so) and causes me a lot of frustration when a third party or even a Windows app (eg Notepad) wants to launch in "MAXIMISED (full screen)" mode AND I need to access the extreme bottom part which is now hidden by the Task Bar. Although I can [Window key] + [left arrow] reduce width of app I typically have great difficulty shrinking it further because the pivot point (bottom right hand corner) is still hidden by the Task Bar.
Yes I can move taskbar to top, left or right - but soon enough I come across an app that needs action that is hidden by the newer task bar position.
I have tried a free app that "hides taskbar" (by using [Ctrl]+[Esc]) but for some reason that app only works about half the time (great help, easy to use, when it DOES work).
So I am considering totally permanently "hiding the taskbar" and have my "Pete's version translucent taskbar custom to my requirements" where I can selectively click either layer to launch etc app. And while I am at it - integrate other info in very simplistic manner such as network traffic (very tiny Graph only), disk free space, launched app icons, "Emergency STOP per app", etc - thereby reducing the "clutter" on the desktop using available apps which are limited to how small they can be sized down (ie only info I need to know now contained within the translucent Task Bar). Consider it being a custom "CONTROL PANEL" but as a translucent Task Bar.
I have not yet successfully integrated graphics onto the (being part of) translucent window - so far text only with graphics resolution positioning.
As ultimately I will need to use mouse AND/OR touch pad to "click thru translucent window" - any suggestions to the best "state of the art" mouse input routine (there were many topics on this eg by
@SMcNeill et al) - as I have never wrote any code using mouse before?