Inventions on Menu and Toolbar Coordination
Umakant Mishra

TL;DR
This paper discusses the similarities and differences between menus and toolbars in GUIs, and introduces five inventions aimed at improving their coordination and functionality.
Contribution
It presents five innovative approaches to enhance the relationship and coordination between menus and toolbars in graphical user interfaces.
Findings
Five inventions for menu and toolbar coordination are illustrated.
Analysis of advantages and disadvantages of menus and toolbars.
Proposals improve GUI accessibility and efficiency.
Abstract
Both toolbar and dropdown menu are used popularly in a graphical user interface with a similar objective of providing easy access to the internal functions. Often the same functions are provided through both menu and toolbar. Both toolbar and dropdown menu have their own advantages and disadvantages. A menu can provide more options occupying less real estate, while toolbar can provide a single click access without navigating through trees and branches. As a menu and toolbar system shares many common objectives, it is often useful maintain some relationship to coordinate between both the elements of a GUI system. The relationships can be easy as both of them often share the same internal function. For example, the print option in a menu will (most likely) call the same function as the print button on the toolbar. This article discusses the similarities and differences between a…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMultimedia Communication and Technology · Software Engineering and Design Patterns
