The difference between a command driven and a graphical user interface is that in command driven a user has to type commands in code to be executed in a terminal. In graphical, a user can simply navigate and operate using an interface and some sort of pointer or touch screen with no coding involved.
The command line interface and the graphical user interface.
Windows has a graphical interface while DOS is a command line interface.
They both allow us to execute commands.
GUI is a Graphical User Interface, which is for making "Windowed" Applications. The CLI is a Command-Line Interface, which is a text prompt in which you can enter specific commands to be executed.
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Graphical User Interface
No, MS-DOS only has a command line interface.
A command-line interface is a text-only interface that relies on input from the keyboard to issue commands to the computer. On the other hand, a graphical user interface allows users to communicate with the computer using a combination of audio, images, animations and text rather than text only.
graphical user inerface
This generally describes the screen you are looking at in a program, and the icons you may click to accomplish (tasks). They are "graphical," rather than, say, verbal, you are the user, and the page is the interface.
Either the GUI (Graphical User Interface) which is what most users see everyday as a point and click system. Or the Command line which is all text based from the command prompt
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