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OpenOffice Writer with an elaborate sidebar to the right, titled "Properties". The sidebar is a graphical control element that displays various forms of information to the right or left side of an application window or operating system desktop.
Menu bar of Mozilla Firefox, showing a submenu. A menu bar is a graphical control element which contains drop-down menus.. The menu bar's purpose is to supply a common housing for window- or application-specific menus which provide access to such functions as opening files, interacting with an application, or displaying help documentation or manuals.
Sidebar may refer to: . Sidebar (publishing) Sidebar (law) Sidebar (computing), a type of graphical user interface element Windows Sidebar, in Windows Vista (rename Windows Desktop Gadgets in Windows 7)
Text-based menu in an application program Text-based menu (German) with selection by cursor keys or mouse. A computer using a command line interface may present a list of relevant commands with assigned short-cuts (digits, numbers or characters) on the screen.
The system menu [1] (also called the window menu or control menu) is a popup menu in Microsoft Windows, accessible by left-clicking on the upper-left icon of most windows, or by pressing the Alt and Space keys.
The Apple Menu in macOS Ventura. The Apple menu is a drop-down menu that is on the left side of the menu bar in the classic Mac OS, macOS and A/UX operating systems.The Apple menu's role has changed throughout the history of Apple Inc.'s operating systems, but the menu has always featured a version of the Apple logo.
Wikipedia's layout features a sidebar on the left side. [needs update]In publishing, sidebar is a term for information placed adjacent to an article in a printed or Web publication, graphically separate but with contextual connection.
Collapsed menu ("Hamburger") icon. The hamburger button (the triple bar ≡ or trigram symbol ☰), so named for its unintentional resemblance to a hamburger, is a button typically placed in a top corner of a graphical user interface. [1]