As there is nothing worth watching on the telly............
All boilers work on pretty much the same principles for hw.
Tap opened activates a diverter valve and lights the burner. Water is pumped around the main heat exchanger (the bit with the flame acting on it) and through a plate heat exchanger transferring heat to the water for the taps. The flame size is controlled basically by a resistor of one kind or the other that reacts to temperature.
In the summer time when the heating is off the water running through the boiler is cold and heats gradually to the set temperature giving the electronics a chance to react as the water temp rises and settles to your desired temperature. It will run all day fairly stable + or - a degree or 2 from the desired setting.
Many boilers have what is called a pre heat which basically means even if the boiler is off, it is sitting with a slug of water at around 60º ready to roll.
This means when a tap is run there is no (very little) delay in hw going down the pipe but the hot is followed by some slightly cooler as the burner reacts then it stabilises.
You can turn the preheat off on most boilers. Personally i think it is a waste of gas having it on but everyone to their own.
When the heating is on the hw reacts in the same way as when preheat is on, only this time the "slug" of water may be as high as 82º depending on how high you have the heating thermostat (the one on the boiler) set.
The electronics on the boiler has no control over this. It can't cool it so that 82º water is diverted straight to heating the HW. It drops a few degrees as it transfers the heat but you could still get some 65 - 70º water through before it stabilises.
I hope that kinda explained things without getting too technical.