A small information box that describes the function of the button.
You may mean the formatting toolbar, which is usually on by default and can be used to format text, but has other uses too.
AnswerIf you mean when a text box appears with text in it then it would be the Alternate text.Also when moving the mouse pointer over images too.Alternative text serves several functions: It is read by screen readers in place of images allowing the content and function of the image to be accessible to those with visual or certain cognitive disabilities.It is displayed in place of the image in user agents (browsers) that don't support the display of images or when the user has chosen not to view images.It provides a semantic meaning and description to images which can be read by search engines or be used to later determine the content of the image from page context alone.
A mini toolbar gives you additional commands appears as you select and hover over text, or right click text in a document. it lets you change the font size, make the test bold, and all that stuff.
Download the toolbar and then follow your browser instructions to install it. Usually you have to open the add-on page and check the box beside this toolbar.
It is usually located at the bottom of the monitor.
The toolbar/taskbar/deskbar is usually the panel along the bottom with all the windows you have open.
Depends on the toolbar you wants to add. However, toolbars are usually placed on the top of the browser. I think the task bar doesn't accept shortcuts for toolbars.
A German shorthaired pointer is a large breed of dog usually liver coloured with white speckles.
Not usually. Laser pointers are usually diode lasers.
A short pointer typically refers to a pointer that occupies fewer bytes (usually 2 bytes), while a long pointer is a pointer that occupies more bytes (usually 4 or 8 bytes) to represent memory addresses in computer programming languages. Short pointers are more limited in the range of memory addresses they can access compared to long pointers.
The Toolbar.
A pointer called a 'yad' is used to keep ones place when reading from the Torah.