A |
|---|
| access privileges | | Permissions granted to a user or group of users
to perform various operations on a file or folder (directory). See permission.
|
|---|
| action | | A desktop construct that provides a method for running applications,
executing commands, and other activities such as printing, removing
files, and changing directories. Actions are defined in a database
of configuration files.
|
|---|
| action icon | | An icon that represents an action in a File Manager
or Application Manager window, or in the workspace. An action icon
is created by creating an empty executable file with the same name
as the action it represents.
|
|---|
| action label | | The name displayed under the icon of an action.
See action name.
|
|---|
| action name | | The name associated with an action, which by default
is displayed under the icon for the action. See action
label.
|
|---|
| active | | A window, window element, or icon that is currently
affected by keyboard and mouse input. Active windows are differentiated
from other windows on the workspace by a distinctive title-bar color
or shade. An active window element is indicated by a highlight or
selection cursor.
|
|---|
| active window | | A window that receives keyboard input.
|
|---|
| address | | An electronic mail location of a user.
|
|---|
| alias | | An alternative name or names assigned to a program
or to an electronic mail address. In electronic mail, an address for mailing to a group of users.
An alias can be created to send electronic mail to a small group
of people or to many people.
|
|---|
| AppBuilder | | A software application used for constructing a graphical user
interface.
|
|---|
| application | | See software application.
|
|---|
| application group | | An Application Manager folder that holds a specific software
application or set of software applications.
|
|---|
| application icon | | See action icon.
|
|---|
| Application Manager | | A window containing objects representing the system
actions available to you.
|
|---|
| application server | | A host computer that provides access to a software application.
|
|---|
| Apply | | A choice that causes a selection (or group of selections)
in a dialog box to take effect.
|
|---|
| Appointment Editor | | In Calendar, a window you use to schedule, change,
or delete an appointment.
|
|---|
| Appointment List | | A chronological list of appointments displayed by Calendar.
|
|---|
| arrow button | | An element of a scroll bar used to scroll a window
by small increments. Also, a control in the Front Panel used to
slide up or slide down a subpanel.
|
|---|
| arrow keys | | The four directional keys on a keyboard. Also see navigation
keys.
|
|---|
| attachment | | In Mailer, a data object within an electronic mail
message that is displayed as an icon in the Attachments list. An
attachment can be text, sound, or a graphic. Multiple messages can
be added (attached) to a single electronic mail message.
|
|---|
B |
|---|
| backdrop | | The pattern that covers the workspace
background.
|
|---|
| background | | The underlying area of a window on which elements,
such as buttons and lists, are displayed.
|
|---|
| Backtrack | | In Help Manager, a button and Navigate menu item
you use to follow links backward, in the reverse order they were
traversed.
|
|---|
| base name | | The file name of an icon file minus the file-name
suffixes for size (.l, .m, .s, .t) and type (.bm, .pm). For example,
the base name of an icon file named myicon.m.pm is myicon.
|
|---|
| bitmap | | An image stored in a raster format. Usually refers
to an image limited to two colors (a foreground and a background
color). Contrast with pixmap.
|
|---|
| busy light | | A control that blinks when a Front Panel action
has been invoked prior to the appearance of a window or when reloading
actions.
|
|---|
| button | | A generic term for a window control. See push
button.
|
|---|
C |
|---|
| Calculator | | A software application that mimics the function
of a hand-held calculator.
|
|---|
| Calendar | | A software application that enables you to schedule appointments
and create To Do lists.
|
|---|
| Calendar view | | The day, week, month, or year displayed in the main Calendar
window.
|
|---|
| Cancel | | A push button that removes a window without applying
any changes made in that window.
|
|---|
| CDE | | An acronym for Common Desktop Environment, a graphical
user interface running on UNIX.
|
|---|
| check box | | A nonexclusive control whose setting is indicated
by the presence or absence of a check mark. A check box has two
states, on and off.
|
|---|
| choose | | To use the mouse or keyboard to pick a menu item,
button, or icon that begins a command or action. Contrast with select.
|
|---|
| click | | To press and release a mouse button without moving
the mouse pointer. Unless otherwise specified, mouse button 1 is
assumed.
|
|---|
| client | | A system or software application that requests services
from another application, usually across a network.
|
|---|
| clipboard | | A buffer that temporarily stores the last cut, copy,
or pasted data.
|
|---|
| Clock | | A Front Panel control that displays the local time.
|
|---|
| Close | | A menu item used to remove a window and all related
secondary windows from all workspaces.
|
|---|
| command-line prompt | | A prompt, usually %, >, or $, that shows
the computer is ready to accept commands. In a terminal emulation
window, you display the command-line prompt by pressing Return.
|
|---|
| Compose window | | In Mailer, the window you use to create new electronic
mail messages. Several message-composing options are available from
the Compose window menu bar.
|
|---|
| configuration file | | A file that is used to customize the properties
of an application.
|
|---|
| container | | A control intended to hold objects or data. A folder
and a notebook are examples of containers. In Mailer, your electronic mailbox and filing system that
contains all mail messages. Once a message is put in a container,
you can display, modify, delete, print, include, forward, and reply
to it.
|
|---|
| control | | A generic term for a variety of elements (such as
buttons, check boxes, and scroll bars) that perform an action or
indicate an option setting. See Front Panel control.
|
|---|
| Create Action | | A software application that enables you to associate
an icon with a command so that the command can be issued by clicking
on the icon. Create Action is also used to define specific data
types for an application's data files and to associate
icons with those data types.
|
|---|
| current folder | | The currently opened folder in an active File Manager view.
|
|---|
| current item, current selection | | The currently highlighted item in a list.
|
|---|
| current session | | The session saved by Session Manager when you log off.
At the next login, unless you specify otherwise, this session automatically
opens, enabling work to continue where you left off. Contrast with home
session.
|
|---|
| cursor | | A graphical device that shows the area that will
receive keyboard or pointing device input.
|
|---|
| customization | | The process of changing settings to alter the appearance and
behavior of the desktop and applications running on the desktop.
|
|---|
D |
|---|
| data type | | A mechanism that associates particular data files
with the appropriate applications and actions. Data types can determine
the type of a file based on file-naming conventions, such as a particular
extension name, or on the contents of the file.
|
|---|
| default | | A value set automatically by an application.
|
|---|
| desktop | | See workspace.
|
|---|
| dialog box | | A window displayed by an application that requires
user input.
|
|---|
| dimmed | | Reduced contrast to show unavailable emphasis.
|
|---|
| directory | | A collection of files and other subdirectories.
In graphical user interface applications, may be called a folder.
|
|---|
| double-click | | To quickly press a mouse button twice without moving
the mouse pointer. Unless otherwise specified, mouse button 1 is
assumed. Double-clicking can often be used as an alternative to
selecting menu items.
|
|---|
| drag | | To press and hold down any mouse button while moving
the pointer—and the object under the pointer—on
the screen.
|
|---|
| drag and drop | | To directly manipulate an icon by using a pointing device
to move and place the icon somewhere else. Also referred to as drag
transfer.
|
|---|
| drag transfer | | See drag and drop.
|
|---|
| drop | | After starting the drag of an object, the act of
releasing the mouse button. If the object is dropped in an appropriate
area, an action is initiated.
|
|---|
| drop target | | A rectangular graphic that represents the drop zone
in an application.
|
|---|
| drop zone | | An area of the workspace, including the Trash Can,
Print Manager, and Mailer Front Panel controls, that accepts a dropped
icon. Icons can be dropped on the workspace for quick access.
|
|---|
E |
|---|
| element | | A generic term for any entity that can be considered
a standalone item in a broader context, such as an item in a list
or a control in a window.
|
|---|
| email | | Short name for "electronic mail." Email
usually describes text messages addressed and sent to you electronically
and are received in your electronic mailbox. Sometimes just known
as "mail."
|
|---|
| environment variables | | Standard UNIX variables that are used by the shell
and by applications.
|
|---|
| error message | | A message that requires the user's immediate
attention. Error messages are used to convey a message about a user
error.
|
|---|
| execute | | A file or folder (directory) access permission.
For files, execute permission enables the user to run a program
or shell script file. For folders (directories), execute permission
enables the user to access the folder (directory) contents.
|
|---|
| Exit button | | A Front Panel control used to log out of the desktop.
|
|---|
| extended selection | | To add multiple items to a selected set by augmenting
the selection technique. For example, you can add to a selection
by moving the pointer to a new item and pressing Control and the
SELECT mouse button simultaneously.
|
|---|
F |
|---|
| file | | A unit of data, such as text, program, image, and
so on, that is stored in a folder (directory).
|
|---|
| File Manager | | The software application that manages the files
and directories on your system.
|
|---|
| file name | | The name of the file as it is stored in a folder
(directory) or on a storage device. A file name consists of a base
name and any suffixes. A fully qualified file name also includes
the path.
|
|---|
| file server | | A host computer that stores data files used by applications.
|
|---|
| file suffix | | A suffix added to the end of a file name, often
used in file typing or to categorize files for the user.
|
|---|
| file type | | Characteristics of a file that determine how it
is used. The type of a file may be determined by a portion of its
name (for example, the file extension) or by its content.
|
|---|
| filter | | Used to display only objects that meet certain criteria,
such as a name pattern match, and to hide all other objects from
view.
|
|---|
| focus | | The place to which keyboard input is directed, indicated
by the highlight.
|
|---|
| folder | | An icon that represents a directory.
|
|---|
| font | | A complete set of characters (letters, digits, and
special characters) of one size and one typeface. Ten-point Helvetica
bold is an example of a font.
|
|---|
| foreground | | The content of a window and the color or shading
used to distinguish it from the window's background.
|
|---|
| Front Panel | | A centrally located window containing controls for accessing
applications and utilities, including the workspace switch.
The Front Panel occupies all workspaces.
|
|---|
| Front Panel control | | An object in the Front Panel used as an interface to
basic system services and frequently performed tasks and operations. Controls
in the default Front Panel are: Clock, Calendar, Mailer, Text Editor,
Help Viewer, File Manager, Printer, Style Manager, Application Manager,
and Trash Can.
|
|---|
| Front Panel move handles | | An area on each end of the Front Panel used for
moving the Front Panel and for bringing it to the front of the workspace.
|
|---|
G |
|---|
| grab handles (or handles) | | The small squares displayed at the corners and midpoints
of a selected graphic element.
|
|---|
| group | | A collection of users who are referred to by a common
name. Also, permission setting that determines a group's
access to files.
|
|---|
| Group Appointment | | In Calendar, an appointment for a group of people,
scheduled using the Group Appointment Editor.
|
|---|
H |
|---|
| header | | In Mailer, the basic information about an electronic
mail message as it appears in the mailer container. A message header displays
the name of the sender, subject, the date and time it was received,
and message size.
|
|---|
| Help | | A button or menu item used to access information
about objects, choices, tasks, and error messages.
|
|---|
| help family | | A set of help volumes that
provide online information about related applications.
|
|---|
| Help Index | | An alphabetic listing of help topics.
|
|---|
| help key | | A designated key, usually the F1 key, used to request
online help information about what the cursor is currently on. Some keyboards have a dedicated Help key that may take the
place of F1.
|
|---|
| Help Manager | | A special help volume that lists all the online
help registered on your system.
|
|---|
| Help Viewer | | The software application that displays online help.
|
|---|
| help volume | | A complete body of help information about a subject.
|
|---|
| help window | | A secondary window that displays help information.
|
|---|
| hierarchical file system | | A way to organize data on computer systems using
a hierarchy of containers, often called folders (directories) and
files. In this scheme, folders may contain other folders and files.
The successive containment of folders within folders creates the
levels of organization, which is the hierarchy.
|
|---|
| highlight | | (v) To make something stand
out on the screen by selecting or choosing it.
Also (n)
the visual indicator that something is selected.
|
|---|
| history | | A list of the most recently accessed commands, files,
folders, or help topics.
|
|---|
| home directory | | A directory where you keep personal files and additional
directories. In graphical user interface applications, may be called
the home folder.
|
|---|
| home folder | | A folder where you keep personal files and additional directories.
By default, File Manager and Terminal Emulator windows are set to
the home folder when you first open them. When discussing command-line
activities, may be called the home directory.
|
|---|
| home session | | A choice at logout to designate a particular session,
other than the one you are currently in, as the one you will automatically return
to at the next login.
|
|---|
| HomeDirectory | | Symbolizes your home directory. For example: If
your home directory is /users/anna, then /HomeDirectory/bitmaps/smile.bm represents
/users/anna/bitmaps/smile.bm.
|
|---|
| host | | A computer system.
|
|---|
| hyperlink | | In Help text, text or a graphic you click to display
another Help topic.
|
|---|
I |
|---|
| icon | | A graphical representation of an object consisting
of an image, an image background, and a label. An icon can be directly
manipulated.
|
|---|
| Icon Editor | | The software application used to create new icons
and to modify existing icons.
|
|---|
| Inbox | | The main or default Mailer container. The Inbox
receives all incoming mail. Messages can be moved out of the Inbox
and put in various containers.
|
|---|
| index | | In a help volume, an alphabetical list of words
or phrases that can be searched to find help on a subject. The Help
System displays the index when you choose the Index button in a
help button dialog.
|
|---|
| insertion point | | The point at which data typed on the keyboard, or pasted
from the clipboard or a file, appears on the screen. In text, a synonym
for cursor.
|
|---|
| Install Icon | | An item on a subpanel used to install icons into
the Front Panel using drag and drop.
|
|---|
| ITE | | Internal Terminal Emulator. ITE allows use of a
bitmapped display as a terminal (through command-line mode from
the login screen).
|
|---|
| items | | Elements in a list or menu.
|
|---|
L |
|---|
| label | | The text appearing next to an icon or control that
names the element.
|
|---|
| link | | Synonym for symbolic link.
|
|---|
| list | | A control that contains elements from which you
select. Also called selection list.
|
|---|
| Lock button | | A Front Panel control used to lock the screen.
|
|---|
| log in | | To supply a user name and password to gain access
to a system or desktop session.
|
|---|
| log out | | To terminate or end access to a system or desktop
session.
|
|---|
| login | | The process of gaining access to a system.
|
|---|
| logout | | The termination of a desktop session.
|
|---|
M |
|---|
| Mailer | | An application that enables you to send, receive,
and compose electronic mail messages.
|
|---|
| mailer container | | The electronic mail box and filing system that contains
all mail messages. Once a message is put in a container, you can display,
modify, delete, print, include, forward, and reply to it.
|
|---|
| Mailer control | | The Front Panel control used to start the Mailer software
application. Dropping a file on the control loads the file into
the Mailer Compose window.
|
|---|
| Main Panel | | The portion of the Front Panel excluding the subpanels.
|
|---|
| mapping | | A method of using one action to run another action.
Also, a pairing of entities in one set with those in another set.
|
|---|
| Maximize | | A choice that enlarges a window to its largest possible
size.
|
|---|
| maximize button | | A button on a window's title bar that you
choose to display the window in its largest size.
|
|---|
| menu | | A list of items from which you select to perform
a particular application task. Also see submenu.
|
|---|
| menu bar | | The part of the application window between the title
bar and the work area where menu names are listed.
|
|---|
| menu item | | An element in a menu that represents a choice (for
example, Copy on the Edit menu).
|
|---|
| Minimize | | To turn a window into an icon. The push button that minimizes
a window is located near the upper right corner of the window frame.
|
|---|
| minimize button | | A button on a window's title bar that you
choose to display the window as an icon.
|
|---|
| mnemonic | | A single, underlined character in a command. The mnemonic
indicates that you can choose the command by typing that letter.
Mnemonics are used most commonly in menu commands; however, other
buttons may also have mnemonics.
|
|---|
| modifier key | | A key that when pressed and held along with another
key or mouse button changes the meaning of the second key or mouse
click. Control, Alt, and Shift are examples.
|
|---|
| mouse | | A device for moving the pointer and making selections.
|
|---|
| mouse button | | A mechanism on a mouse that you press to make selections.
|
|---|
| mouse button 1 | | On a mouse, the leftmost button when configured
for right-handed use; the rightmost button when configured for left-handed use.
Mouse button 1 is primarily used for selection, and is the default button
for the "click" instruction.
|
|---|
| mouse button 2 | | On a three-button mouse, the middle button. On a two-button
mouse, the right button if configured for right-handed use or the
left button if configured for left-handed use. Mouse button 2 has
two modes: Transfer and Adjust.
|
|---|
| mouse button 3 | | On a mouse, the rightmost button when configured
for right-handed use; the leftmost button when configured for left-handed use.
Mouse button 3 activates pop-up menus.
|
|---|
| Move | | A window menu choice used to put a window in a different
location on the screen.
|
|---|
N |
|---|
| navigation keys | | The keyboard keys used to move the current location of
the cursor. These include the arrow keys (with or without the Control key);
the Tab key (with or without the Control or Shift keys); the Begin and
End keys (with or without the Control key); and the Page Up and Page
Down keys.
|
|---|
| newline character | | An unseen character that marks the end of a line
of text in a document. It tells a printer or screen to break a line
and start a new one.
|
|---|
O |
|---|
| object | | Any logical piece of data that has associated behavior.
For example, in File Manager, files, folders, actions, and applications
are all considered objects. Each type of object has specific associated
actions. Typically, each object is represented as an icon.
|
|---|
| object type | | A desktop mechanism used to associate particular
data files with the appropriate applications and actions. Object
typing defines the criteria for typing the file (such as name or
contents), the appearance (the icon used in File Manager), and the
behavior of the object (for example, what happens when you double-click
it).
|
|---|
| OK | | A choice that accepts the information in a window
and closes it. If the window contains changed information, those
changes are applied before the window is closed.
|
|---|
| On Item help | | When you choose On Item from the Help menu, the cursor
changes to a question mark and you can obtain information about a
particular command, operation, dialog box, or control by clicking
that object.
|
|---|
| On Item Help control | | A Front Panel control used to access item help information
on the Front Panel.
|
|---|
| overwrite | | To replace.
|
|---|
P |
|---|
| page | | To advance text displayed in a window by one full
screen at a time, usually using a scroll bar.
|
|---|
| palette | | A range of graphically displayed choices, such as
colors or collections of tools, that you can select in an application.
|
|---|
| parent directory | | A directory that contains subdirectories and files.
In graphical user interface applications, this may be called the parent folder.
|
|---|
| parent folder | | A folder that contains subfolders and files. When discussing
command-line activities, this may be called the parent directory.
|
|---|
| password | | A sequence of characters that users type to prove
their identity to the system.
|
|---|
| path | | A text string that specifies the hierarchical location
of a folder (directory).
|
|---|
| pause | | To temporarily suspend a process without ending
it.
|
|---|
| permission | | A setting that determines how users or groups of
users may access a file or folder (directory).
|
|---|
| pixmap | | An image stored in a raster format. Usually refers
to an image that may have more than two colors. Contrast with bitmap.
|
|---|
| point | | To move the mouse until the pointer rests on a particular
screen element or area.
|
|---|
| pointer | | A cursor that shows the area that receives input
from a pointing device. The pointer can take the form of an arrow,
an I-beam, a cross, or other graphic. Also see cursor.
|
|---|
| pop-up menu | | A menu that, when requested, is displayed next to
the object with which it is associated. Pop-up menus are usually
displayed by clicking mouse button 3 or pressing Shift+F10.
|
|---|
| Print Manager | | A software application that shows all the printers
on your system.
|
|---|
| print server | | A host computer to which one or more printers are connected,
or the UNIX process that manages those printers.
|
|---|
| Printer control | | The Front Panel control used to start the Printer software
application. Dropping a file on the control displays a dialog box you
can use to print the file to the default printer.
|
|---|
| Printer Jobs | | A software application that provides information
about jobs on a single printer.
|
|---|
| program | | A sequence of instructions that a computer can interpret
and execute.
|
|---|
| Properties | | A menu item used to set characteristics of an item,
such as its date or name, or display identifying characteristics
of an item, such as typefaces.
|
|---|
| pull-down menu | | A menu of related choices that extends from a cascading
choice when you click mouse button 1 on a menu bar item or the Window
menu button.
|
|---|
| push button | | A control that immediately starts an action by an application,
usually executing a command (such as Apply), displaying a window,
or displaying a menu.
|
|---|
Q |
|---|
| queue | | An ordered list of jobs waiting to be performed.
|
|---|
R |
|---|
| radio button | | An exclusive control whose setting is indicated
by the presence or absence of a graphical indicator, usually part
of a radio group. A radio button has two states, on and off.
|
|---|
| Read | | Permission to look at the data in a file or permission
to list the files and folders (directories) in a folder (directory).
|
|---|
| Reset | | A button or menu item used to return an item to
the condition it was in when it was last opened or to the condition
it was in before the most recent changes were applied to it, whichever
is more recent.
|
|---|
| resize border | | A control used to change the size of a window or
a pane in a window.
|
|---|
| resource | | A mechanism of the X Window SystemTM for specifying
an attribute (appearance or behavior) of a window or application.
Resources are usually named after the elements they control.
|
|---|
| restart | | To stop a process and start it again.
|
|---|
| Restore | | A menu item used to return a window to the size
and position it occupied before you minimized or maximized it.
|
|---|
| root directory | | In a hierarchical file system, the directory that
contains all other directories and files. Represented by a / (slash)
in UNIX systems.
|
|---|
| root, root user | | See superuser.
|
|---|
| run | | To start an application or action.
|
|---|
S |
|---|
| sash | | A box on a separator or split bar that enables you
to increase or decrease the size of a window pane using the mouse.
You can navigate to the sash using the keyboard.
|
|---|
| screen lock | | A function that locks the workstation screen, barring further
input until the valid user password is entered.
|
|---|
| Screen Saver | | A choice that, after a specified time period, switches
off the workstation display or varies the images that are displayed,
thereby prolonging the life of the screen.
|
|---|
| scroll | | To move the cursor through data one increment at
a time. While scrolling, data shifts within the window to indicate
the current position of the cursor.
|
|---|
| scroll bar | | A control located at the right or bottom of a window
that enables you to display window content not currently visible.
|
|---|
| scroll box | | The part of a scroll bar that shows the position
of the visible information relative to the total amount of information
available in a window. You click a scroll box to see information
that is not currently visible.
|
|---|
| select | | To add highlighting or some other visual cue to
an item or element so that it can be operated or enabled. Selection
does not imply the initiation of an action but rather a change of
state, such as highlighting an item in a list, or toggling a check
box on.
|
|---|
| server | | A system that supplies services to a client.
|
|---|
| session | | The elapsed time between user login and logout.
Also, a particular configuration of workspaces that includes Style
Manager settings, open applications, and the size and position of
objects.
|
|---|
| Session Manager | | A software application that controls saving sessions, restoring
sessions, screen locking and unlocking, and the use of screen savers.
When a session is saved, the state of the desktop environment (location
of icons, size and location of open windows, open/closed status
of applications, current color palette, and so on) is preserved
so that it can be restored at the next login.
|
|---|
| session server | | A system that provides networked sessions. Session files
reside on the session server and are used whenever you log in to
a system on the network.
|
|---|
| shortcut | | General term for a mouse gesture that simplifies
filling out a dialog box. For example: As a shortcut, double-click
an item in the Filename list box to select it and choose OK in one
action.
|
|---|
| shortcut keys | | A keyboard key sequence used to activate a menu
item, usually through a special accelerator key. For example: Press
Alt+F to choose Print from the File menu.
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|---|
| slider | | A control that uses a track and arm to set a value
from among the available values. The position of the arm (or a separate
indicator) gives the currently set value.
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|---|
| software application | | A computer program that provides you with tools
to do work. Style Manager, Text Editor, and File Manager are examples
of software applications.
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|---|
| status area | | A part of a window where information is displayed
that shows the state of an object or the state of a particular view
of an object.
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|---|
| Style Manager | | The software application used to customize some
of the visual elements and system device behaviors of the workspace environment,
including colors and fonts, and keyboard, mouse, window, and session
start-up behaviors.
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|---|
| subdirectory | | A directory contained within another directory (sometimes
called the parent directory). In graphical
user interface applications, this may be called a subfolder.
|
|---|
| subfolder | | A folder contained within another folder (sometimes
called the parent folder). When discussing
command-line activities, this may be called a subdirectory.
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|---|
| submenu | | A menu displayed by choosing an item from a menu.
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|---|
| subpanel | | An extension of the Front Panel that slides up providing access
to additional elements. Subpanels usually contain groups of related
elements.
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|---|
| suffix | | A part of a file name, added at the end, separated
from other suffixes or the base file name by some punctuation, such
as a period (.).
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|---|
| superuser | | A login identity that enables special permissions
for modifying system files that most users do not have permission
to modify. Superuser is also called "the root user" or "root" because
the user ID for superuser is root. On most computer systems, only
a few users have permission to become superuser.
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|---|
| symbolic link | | A type of link that is capable of pointing to a
file or directory that resides on another physical storage device
or partition.
|
|---|
T |
|---|
| template | | In Mailer, an ASCII file you can create for conveniently including
frequently typed information, such as your name and electronic mail
address, in your mail messages.
|
|---|
| Terminal | | In the Front Panel, an item in the Personal Applications subpanel
used to open a terminal window.
|
|---|
| terminal emulator | | A window that emulates a particular type of terminal
for running nonwindow programs. Terminal emulator windows are most
commonly used for typing commands to interact with the computer's
operating system.
|
|---|
| text cursor | | A cursor that shows the insertion point for textual
input. This cursor usually takes the form of an I-beam. Contrast
with location cursor and pointer.
|
|---|
| Text Editor | | The software application used to create and edit documents.
|
|---|
| text field | | A rectangular area in a window where information
is typed. Text fields with keyboard focus have a blinking text insertion
cursor.
|
|---|
| title bar | | The topmost area of a window containing the window
title, window menu button, and the maximize and minimize buttons.
See also window title.
|
|---|
| toggle | | To change the state of a two-state control, such
as a radio button or check box, using either the mouse or keyboard.
|
|---|
| topic tree | | In a general help dialog box, an expandable and
contractible list of topics that can be selected to display help
information.
|
|---|
| Trash Can | | A container for deleted files or folders.
|
|---|
| tree view | | A view of a folder or files that includes all lower-level
folders in the search path.
|
|---|
U |
|---|
| user name | | An identifier for making a user known to the system. Sometimes
called a login name. For example, a user whose name is John Doe
might have the user name jdoe. The login screen prompts for the user
name.
|
|---|
W |
|---|
| window | | A rectangular area on the display. Software applications typically
have one main window from which secondary windows, called dialog
boxes, can be opened.
|
|---|
| window frame | | The visible part of a window that surrounds a software application.
A window frame can contain up to five controls: title bar, resize
borders, minimize button, maximize button, and the Window menu button.
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|---|
| window icon | | A minimized window.
|
|---|
| Window Manager | | The software application that provides users with the
capability to manipulate windows on the workspace; for example, opening,
resizing, moving, and closing windows.
|
|---|
| Window menu | | The menu displayed by choosing the Window menu button.
The menu provides choices that manipulate the location or size of the
window, such as Move, Size, Minimize, and Maximize.
|
|---|
| Window menu button | | The control at the upper left corner of a window, next
to the title bar. Choosing it displays the Window menu.
|
|---|
| work area | | The part of a window where controls and text appear.
|
|---|
| workspace | | The current screen display, the icons and windows
if contains, and the unoccupied screen area where icons can be placed.
|
|---|
| workspace backdrop | | See backdrop.
|
|---|
| workspace background | | The portion of the display not covered by windows
or icons.
|
|---|
| workspace icon | | An icon that has been copied from File Manager to
the workspace.
|
|---|
| Workspace Manager | | The software application that controls the size, placement,
and operation of windows within multiple workspaces.
|
|---|
| Workspace menu | | The menu displayed by pointing at an unoccupied area
of the workspace and clicking button 3 on the mouse.
|
|---|
| workspace object | | An object that resides in a workspace, rather than inside
a viewer in a window. Workspace objects include windows, icons (minimized
windows), and objects that have been dragged from File Manager and
Application Manager and dropped on a workspace.
|
|---|
| workspace switch | | A control that enables you to select one workspace from
among several workspaces.
|
|---|
| workspace switch area | | The rectangular area in the center of the Front
Panel that contains the workspace switches, the Lock control, the Exit
button, and the busy light.
|
|---|
| Wrap To Fit | | In Text Editor, this setting controls whether lines
are automatically wrapped to fit the window width as you enter text.
If set, lines wrap at the edge of the window. If not set, you must
press Return to end the line.
|
|---|
| Write | | Permission to modify the contents of a file or folder.
|
|---|