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The toolbar, also called a bar or standard toolbar (originally known as ribbon), [1] [2] is a graphical control element on which on-screen icons can be used. A toolbar often allows for quick access to functions that are commonly used in the program. Some examples of functions a toolbar might have are open file, save, and change font.
The toolbar works with Google Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer, Microsoft Edge, the Mozilla Suite/SeaMonkey, Konqueror, Safari and Opera. In Mozilla browsers, IE, and Chrome, you can format existing text by highlighting the text you want to format and clicking the relevant button on the toolbar.
It facilitates wiki-based teaching and content creation where internet access and electricity are expensive, intermittent, or unreliable. It was realized by the Wiki in Africa association in collaboration with Wikimedia CH and Kiwix ( Anthere , Emmanuel Engelhard (Kelson), Florent Kaisser, Renaud Gaudin, Tonygarfume and other members of the ...
This opens an editable copy of the page, showing all the wikitext used there, and the Source Editor toolbar offers simple menu options to add or change the formatting. Wikitext is used extensively throughout Wikipedia for such things as hyperlinks , tables and columns , footnotes , inline citation , special characters and so on.
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 controls.
Current versions of Opera have direct search of Wikipedia enabled through using the keyword "w" in the address field of the browser. An address of "w opera" will thus return the same page as you get if you enter "opera" in Wikipedia's search field and choose "Go".
The default settings for the taskbar in Microsoft Windows place it at the bottom of the screen and includes from left to right the Start menu button, Quick Launch bar, taskbar buttons, and notification area. The Quick Launch toolbar was added with the Windows Desktop Update and is not enabled by default in Windows XP. Windows 7 removed the ...
The modified toolbar This screencast walks through how to use the various features of RefTools. RefToolbar 2.0 is the current version of RefToolbar, which adds citing capability to the enhanced editing toolbar (the MediaWiki extension WikiEditor). It may appear two different ways depending on a user's preferences.