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Some restaurants change their menus according to lunch or dinner. Some have the same menu all day. Some are only open for one meal. It depends.
Yes.. Some utilities..
The menu bar holds shortcuts to frequently used programs. A person can place different menus under a menu bar as well in order to save space.
No. It uses ribbons. The same options are available, so once you get used to them, you can do anything that you could do in versions that had menus. You can also open some options using older shortcut keys that involved menus, starting with the Alt key.
WIMP Windows Icons Menus Pointer
uses pull-down menus and screen images that are easier to use than systems that require users to memorize and type lengthy commands.
Menus give options like how many copies you want
they are organised into toolbars, which in turn contain icons with different tools
no. there are no such thing as menus
That is called a chained selection. See related link for an example.
Both have File, Edit, Format, View, Insert, Format, Tools, Window and Help menus. Word has also got a Table menu, which Excel doesn't. Excel has a Data menu, which Word doesn't. On the menus they both have a lot of options are the same, but some options are quite different. For example Word's Insert menu won't have options like Cells, Rows and Columns that Excel will have, but will have options like Autotext, Reference and Field, that Excel won't have. As the two applications are for different jobs, they are naturally going to have different options. Some things will be common, like options to open, close and save files, or to cut, copy and paste things. Options on the Tools and Format menus in each application are going to be different because they are for different tasks. The same applies to other applications which will have a lot of the same menus and options and also have menus and options that are specific to those applications.
There is no widely known author named L M Gruitt. It is possible that the author you are referring to uses a different pseudonym or is not well-known in literary circles.