enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of graphical user interface elements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_graphical_user...

    An icon is a small picture that represents objects such as a file, program, web page, or command. They are a quick way to execute commands, open documents, and run programs. Icons are also very useful when searching for an object in a browser list, because in many operating systems all documents using the same extension will have the same icon.

  3. Graphical user interface - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphical_user_interface

    A graphical user interface (GUI) showing various elements: radio buttons, checkboxes, and other elements. A graphical user interface, or GUI [a], is a form of user interface that allows users to interact with electronic devices through graphical icons and visual indicators such as secondary notation.

  4. List of widget toolkits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_widget_toolkits

    It wraps the native Windows controls, providing object-oriented classes and visual design, although also allowing access to the underlying handles and other WinAPI details if required. It was originally implemented as a successor to OWL, skipping the OWL/MFC style of UI creation, which by the mid-nineties was a dated design model. [3]

  5. Angular (web framework) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angular_(web_framework)

    Angular (also referred to as Angular 2+) [4] is a TypeScript-based free and open-source single-page web application framework. It is developed by Google and by a community of individuals and corporations. Angular is a complete rewrite from the same team that built AngularJS.

  6. Graphical widget - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphical_widget

    Others act as containers that group the widgets added to them, for example windows, panels, and tabs. Structuring a user interface with widget toolkits allows developers to reuse code for similar tasks, and provides users with a common language for interaction, maintaining consistency throughout the whole information system.

  7. User interface - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User_interface

    The Reactable musical instrument, an example of a tangible user interface. The user interface or human–machine interface is the part of the machine that handles the human–machine interaction. Membrane switches, rubber keypads and touchscreens are examples of the physical part of the Human Machine Interface which we can see and touch. [1]

  8. Ionic (mobile app framework) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ionic_(mobile_app_framework)

    Ionic apps run with a mixture of native code and web code, providing full access to native functionality if necessary, with the bulk of the UI of the app built with standard web technology. Ionic utilizes native hardware acceleration features available in the browser (such as CSS animations) and optimizes rendering (avoiding expensive DOM ...

  9. Favicon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Favicon

    Browsers that provide favicon support typically display a page's favicon in the browser's address bar (sometimes in the history as well) and next to the page's name in a list of bookmarks. [3] Browsers that support a tabbed document interface typically show a page's favicon next to the page's title on the tab, and site-specific browsers use the ...