Noun
toolbar (plural toolbars)
(graphical user interface) A row of buttons, usually marked with icons, used to activate the functions of an application or operating system.
After launching a video, you click the “NP” button in your browser’s toolbar to generate a shareable link, allowing others to watch and comment on the same video, with playback synchronized across all devices. Source: Internet
Advantages * With multiple document interfaces (and also tabbed document interfaces ), a single menu bar and/or toolbar is shared between all child windows, reducing clutter and increasing efficient use of screen space. Source: Internet
All the menus and toolbar buttons can be customized using text-format configuration files. Source: Internet
Another long-promised change, the improved viewer sports a toolbar that collects previous functions — such as zooming in and out on the document — as well as new options, like the current page number and a fit-to-width command, in one place. Source: Internet
Add YouTrack Pattern on the toolbar, and type the URL to the installation of the bug tracking system. Source: Internet
An especially noteworthy feature of the app (accessed through the same toolbar) is the ability to browse by “Learning Area” categories: Arts, Emotional Development, Health, Literacy, Logic and Reasoning, Math, Science, and Social Development. Source: Internet