| widget | a device that is very useful for a particular job | en |
| widget | Any small gadget, device or mechanism that is unknown or temporarily forgotten; a car is full of them | en |
| widget | miscellaneous object designed for a specific purpose -i e - a scroll bar or button | en |
| widget | hypothetical object; name for an item whose name has been forgotten; graphic symbol that enables interaction between the user and computer (scroll bar, button, etc.); small computer program that defines the action of graphic symbols isim | en |
| widget | A specific graphical control, such as a button or a box, used by a GUI to accept or respond to user actions | en |
| widget | a component of a frame within a Business Wizard | en |
| widget | The fundamental building block of graphical user interfaces The OSF/Motif widget set provides widgets of all sorts, suitable for constructing an application user interface | en |
| widget | Any item used for input/output on the screen For instance, a button is a widget as well as a text field Widgets can receive focus | en |
| widget | a piece of a graph that enforces certain properties (See page 1008) | en |
| widget | A set of clickable, graphical element in a user interface This includes buttons, radios, checkboxes, and scroll bars Widgets vary in appearance and dimension from platform to platform | en |
| widget | basic interface objects of the X Toolkit Intrinsics associated with an X window with encapsulated functionality | en |
| widget | You can refer to any small device as a widget when you do not know exactly what it is or how it works. The secret is a little widget in the can | en |
| widget | A small scraping tool consisting of a blade and a handle, commonly used to remove paint from glass and other smooth surfaces | en |
| widget | The child of a gremlin (Roald Dahl - The Gremlins) | en |
| widget | An unnamed, unspecified, or hypothetical manufactured good or product | en |
| widget | An object of fiction or obfuscation (Gigawidget) | en |
| widget | A floating widget or other device inside a beer can, meant to create foam when opened | en |
| widget | A component of a graphical user interface that the user interacts with | en |
| widget | A standardized on-screen representation of a control that may be manipulated by the user Scroll bars, buttons, and text boxes are all examples of widgets | en |
| widget | An object on a Panther screen Some widgets are used to interact with an application, while others are for display only | en |
| widget | An object used to hold data and present an interface to the user A widget is a combination of state and procedure Each widget is a member of a class, which holds the procedures and data structures common to all widgets of that class A widget instance holds the procedures and data structures particular to that single widget Each widget class typically provides the general behavior associated with a particular kind of interaction with the user | en |
| widget | An element of a window-based user interface, or WIMP, such as a button, scrollbar, text editing area, etc Programmatically, widgets are often expressed as data structures | en |
| widget | - A graphical user interface programming object (button, scrollbar, radio button, etc ) for the X Window System (Also, see X Window System ) | en |
| widget | n 1 A meta-thing Used to stand for a real object in didactic examples (especially database tutorials) Legend has it that the original widgets were holders for buggy whips "But suppose the parts list for a widget has 52 entries " 2 [poss evoking `window gadget'] A user interface object in {X} graphical user interfaces | en |
| widget | (n ) In a window system, a reusable user interface component such as a button, scrollbar, control area, text edit area, and so on When an X Toolkit Intrinsics function creates a widget, it is returned as an opaque data handle and assigned to a variable called a widget identifier See also OLIT | en |
| widget | A user interface element which is placed on the form | en |
| widget | A component (e g a pushbutton) in a graphical user interface | en |
| widget | In the XToolkit a widget is an XWindow + associated semantics They are created by combining other widgets or from scratch Menus, Button Boxes, Scroll-barred windows and Text handlers can all be constructed using toolkit routines | en |
| widget | This is the basic graphical component of the Xt library, encapsulating the display process and associated data Each widget has predefined properties and actions (routines to be invoked under the proper conditions) | en |
| widget | A widget is universal catch-all name to describe things that factories make and, hopefully, sell for a profit They are solid things that hurt if you drop them on your toe Things like fridges | en |
| widget | A graphical user interface object, for example, a button, text box, etc | en |
| widget | A manipulable or decorative element of a graphical user interface Much of the programming for GUI elements is associated with defining the reaction of widgets to user-mouse and keyboard events | en |
| widget | A single element of a graphical user interface, such as a button, scrollbar, or text input area | en |
| widgets | Interface components that are part of the IRIS IM toolkit See also interface elements and IRIS IM | en |
| widgets | plural of widget | en |
| widgets | A widget is a graphical representation of a logical input device There is a loose definition of a widget as a term used to describe any abstract device | en |
| widgets | A data structure that normally includes information about a user-interface component (like a button or an edit box) and has pointers to the code needed to make the component work Windows are not widgets but widgets have windows in them Widgets that don't have any windows are called something else (gadgets) | en |
| widgets | Graphical objects in ToolBook that are pre-scripted 14 27 | en |