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In computing, the icon bar is the name of the dock in Acorn's RISC OS operating system, and is fundamental to the OS. Its introduction in 1987 (as part of ''Arthur'', the predecessor to ) was a new concept in GUIs.〔 〕〔 〕 It displays icons through which access is provided to all parts of the computer that a typical user will require, from physical devices and system utilities to running applications, and will usually be their starting point for interacting with the system once it has finished booting. == Appearance and features == The bar is fixed in height and located at the bottom of the screen. It takes up the full width of the screen, and a single row of icons is displayed within. Icons are either justified to the left or the right edge of the screen, at the control of the owning program. According to Acorn's official RISC OS Style Guide, a program should place its icons to the left hand side of the icon bar if they relate to physical devices or resources such as filing systems. These will have an item of text underneath them identifying the device or resource. All other icons should be placed on the right of the bar.〔''RISC OS 3 Style Guide'', p.94. Acorn Computers Limited, 1993, ISBN 978-1-85250-148-8〕〔''RISC OS Style Guide'', p.104. RISC OS Open Limited, 2015, ISBN 978-0-99319-480-1〕 If too many icons are present to be displayed at once then the icon bar will extend horizontally and become wider than the screen; in order to access the non-visible icons the user must scroll the bar by hovering the mouse pointer at the appropriate edge of the screen. The result of clicking the left mouse button (known as the ''Select'' button) on an icon will vary depending on what the icon represents. For filing systems, a filer window will open containing the contents of the root directory. For document-oriented applications supporting multiple open documents, clicking ''Select'' will open a window containing a new, empty document. This is different from the behaviour of the typical Taskbar and Dock, where clicking an icon will result in a task switch (All windows associated with the icon will be brought to the front of the window stack and will gain input focus). For programs that do not support multiple open documents, clicking its icon will typically result in the task switch behaviour. By pressing the middle (''Menu'') mouse button while the pointer is over an icon, a context-sensitive menu associated with that icon will open. Although the owner of the icon is responsible for the contents of the menu, the menus for icons with similar functions will typically contain the same subset of options. For example filing systems will allow the naming and formatting of disks, as well as an option to open a window displaying free space. Most applications will provide access to an ''Info'' window (displaying the version number and copyright information), online help, and a quit option. Drag and Drop, Filer Icons (File or Directory) can be dragged and dropped on top of an Icon bar Icon to initiate a process, if the object type is known to the application. For example: * Copying a file or directory to the root of a Floppy or Network drive * Adding a file or Directory to a Compressed Archive. * Opening a text file in a Word-processor * Playing a Music file or Video. * Deleting a file by placing it in the Waste bin. Even if there are no running applications or active filing systems, the icon bar will contain a small number of system-managed icons: * The ''Apps'' icon, located within the left-hand group of icons. This was introduced in RISC OS 3 as a way to access the applications built into the computer's ROM. It is actually just a frontend to the read-only ResourceFS filing system; when the icon is clicked it opens the Resources:$.Apps folder. Although ResourceFS is read-only via the usual filing system interface, system APIs can be used to add or replace files. In RISC OS 3.5 this functionality was leveraged to allow the user to easily add his own applications to the Apps folder, via the ''AddApp''〔("Star Command Summaries" )〕〔("RISC OS Star Commands@Everything2.com" )〕 star command. The applications inserted using ''AddApp'' are simple shell applications that will just execute the real, original copy of the application when they are started. This allows the applications to be added without using significant amounts of RAM and restricting them to read-only access to their internal files. * The ''Task Manager'' icon, located to the far right of the icon bar. When clicked with the left mouse button this opens a window similar to that of the Windows Task Manager, where the running programs and processes are listed, along with their memory usage. Basic control over the processes is also available (forced termination and in some cases manual control over how much memory is allocated). From the task manager's icon bar menu it is also possible to shutdown the computer, exit the window manager to the single-tasking CLI, or open a multi-tasking CLI window. A ''desktop boot file'' can also be saved, which contains the current state of the desktop and any loaded programs. In theory this provides full hibernation support, although in reality because each program is responsible for saving and restoring its state within the file, the computer's state after executing the saved boot file will not be identical to its state before. * The ''Display Manager'' icon is located just to the left of the task manager. This allows selection of which display mode is in use. In versions of RISC OS prior to 3.5, where memory restrictions forced most people to use modes with 16 or less colours, it was also possible to alter the current palette from this icon. In RISC OS 3 the AddTinyDir〔〔 star command was introduced, which allows an icon for any file, folder or application to be added to the left-hand side of the icon bar. This provides functionality similar to that later embodied in the Mac OS X dock.〔("AppleInsider: Road to Mac OS X Leopard: Dock 1.6" )〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Icon bar」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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