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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.
A menu bar is displayed horizontally across the top of the screen and/or along the tops of some or all windows. A pull-down menu is commonly associated with this menu type. When a user clicks on a menu option the pull-down menu will appear. [3] [4] A menu has a visible title within the menu bar. Its contents are only revealed when the user ...
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]
(Not context-sensitive, functionally a "Spotlight" for menu bar items and help topics) ⇧ Shift+F1: ⇧ Shift+F1: Give focus to next/previous pane Ctrl+F6 / Alt+F5: ⌘ Cmd+` ⌘ Cmd+⇧ Shift+` F5 / Alt+F6: Give focus to splitter bar in paned window F8: Give focus to window's menu bar: F10 or Alt: ⌘ Cmd+⇧ Shift+/, then type command name, or
Application switching prior to Mac OS 8.5 was done by clicking on an application's window or via a pull-down menu at the right end of the menu bar. Prior to version 8.5 the menu's title was the icon of the foreground application. Version 8.5 introduced the ability to optionally also display the application name and to "tear off" the menu by ...
With the release of Microsoft Office 2007 came the "Fluent User Interface" or "Fluent UI", which replaced menu bars and customizable toolbars with a single "Office menu", a miniature toolbar known as "quick-access toolbar" and what came to be known as the ribbon: multiple tabs, each holding a toolbar bearing buttons and occasionally other ...
A menu extra, menu item, menulet, or status item is a graphical control element in macOS.It is a small indicator that appears at the right of the menu bar.They often provide quick ways to use applications (e.g. iChat) or display information (for example the system clock), or control system-level variables (for example audio volume).
Pictorial menu for a digital camera. A user chooses an option from a menu by using an input device. Some input methods require linear navigation: the user must move a cursor or otherwise pass from one menu item to another until reaching the selection. On a computer terminal, a reverse video bar may serve as the cursor.