scroll$552381$ - определение. Что такое scroll$552381$
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Что (кто) такое scroll$552381$ - определение

USER INTERFACE ELEMENT
Scroll elevator; Scroll Bar; Scroll box; Scroll bar
  • Trough marks in the vertical scrollbar during search in Google Chrome browser
  • Examples of horizontal and vertical scrollbars around a text box

Isaiah Scroll         
  • Great Isaiah Scroll facsimile photo showing an example of cancellation marks (dots) below the text and corrections made above it.
  • Photo of Great Isaiah Scroll facsimile showing columns 12–13 (chapters 14–16). Damage is shown at the bottom of the scroll, obscuring some of the text.
  • Qumran Cave 1, where 1QIsa<sup>a</sup> was found.
  • The Great Isaiah Scroll, the best preserved of the biblical scrolls found at [[Qumran]]
A SCROLL OF THE BOOK OF ISAIAH DISCOVERED WITH THE DEAD SEA SCROLLS
1QIs-a; Great Isaiah scroll; Great Isaiah Scroll; 1QIsaa; Isaiah scroll
The Isaiah Scroll, designated 1QIsaa and also known as the Great Isaiah Scroll, is one of the seven Dead Sea Scrolls that were first discovered by Bedouin shepherds in 1946 from Qumran Cave 1. The scroll is written in Hebrew and contains the entire Book of Isaiah from beginning to end, apart from a few small damaged portions.
Scroll (art)         
  • Rice, David Talbot]], ''Byzantine Art'', 3rd edn 1968, Penguin Books Ltd, plates 109-115</ref> Note the common core element of the heart shaped confronted volutes & stem, highlighted in green.<br>
Key:
*E: ''Ara Pacis'', sculpture, c. 27&nbsp;AD
*B: ''Palazzo Mattei'', Rome, stucco relief, 2nd century
*D: Lateran, Rome, SS. Rufinus & Secundus, mosaic, 4th century
*A: Dome of the Rock, Jerusalem, mosaic, 691-2
*C: San Clemente, Rome, mosaic, c. 1200
  • Band of running scroll decoration on the 12th-century Indian [[Hoysaleswara Temple]]
  • meanders]] below the figures.
  • Austrian inhabited scroll frieze, 1890s
FORM OF DECORATION DOMINATED BY SPIRALLING SCROLLS
Scroll work; Scrollwork; Inhabited scroll; Vine-scroll; Vine-scrolls; Plant-scroll; Running scroll
The scroll in art is an element of ornament and graphic design featuring spirals and rolling incomplete circle motifs, some of which resemble the edge-on view of a book or document in scroll form, though many types are plant-scrolls, which loosely represent plant forms such as vines, with leaves or flowers attached. Scrollwork is a term for some forms of decoration dominated by spiralling scrolls, today used in popular language for two-dimensional decorative flourishes and arabesques of all kinds, especially those with circular or spiralling shapes.
The Great Psalms Scroll         
  • accessdate = 2015-11-10}}</ref>
  • Psalm 118 in the 11Q5 Manuscript
DEAD SEA SCROLLS MANUSCRIPT OF THE PSALMS
11Q5; The Great Psalms Scroll
The Great Psalms Scroll, also referred to as 11Q5, is the most substantial and well preserved Dead Sea Scrolls Psalms manuscript of the thirty-seven discovered in the Qumran caves, six of which were discovered in Cave 11.

Википедия

Scrollbar

A scrollbar is an interaction technique or widget in which continuous text, pictures, or any other content can be scrolled in a predetermined direction (up, down, left, or right) on a computer display, window, or viewport so that all of the content can be viewed, even if only a fraction of the content can be seen on a device's screen at one time. It offers a solution to the problem of navigation to a known or unknown location within a two-dimensional information space. It was also known as a handle in the very first GUIs. They are present in a wide range of electronic devices including computers, graphing calculators, mobile phones, and portable media players. The user interacts with the scrollbar elements using some method of direct action, the scrollbar translates that action into scrolling commands, and the user receives feedback through a visual updating of both the scrollbar elements and the scrolled content.

Although scrollbar designs differ throughout their history, they usually appear on one or two sides of the viewing area as long rectangular areas containing a bar (or thumb) that can be dragged along a trough (or track) to move the body of the document. This can be placed vertically, horizontally, or both in the window depending on which direction the content extends past its boundaries. Two arrows are often included on either end of the thumb or trough for more precise adjustments. The “thumb” has different names in different environments: on the Mac OS X 10.4 it is called a "scroller"; on the Java platform it is called "thumb" or "knob"; Microsoft's .NET documentation refers to it as "scroll box" or "scroll thumb"; in other environments it is called "elevator", "quint", "puck", "wiper" or "grip"; in certain environments where browsers use agnostic language to the scrollbar terminology, the thumb is referred to as the 'pea' for vertical movement of the bar and still use 'puck' for horizontal movement.

Additional functions may be found, such as zooming in/out or various application-specific tools. Depending on the GUI, the size of the thumb can be fixed or variable in size; in the later case of proportional thumbs, its length would indicate the size of the window in relation to the size of the whole document, indicated by the full track. While proportional thumbs were available in several GUIs, including GEM, AmigaOS and PC/GEOS, even in the mid 1980s, Microsoft did not implement them until Windows 95. A proportional thumb that completely fills the trough indicates that the entire document is being viewed, at which point the scrollbar may temporarily become hidden. The proportional thumb can also sometimes be adjusted by dragging its ends, such as in Sony Vegas, a non-linear video editing software package. In this case it would adjust both the position and the zooming of the document, where the size of the thumb represents the degree of zooming applied.

A scrollbar should be distinguished from a slider which is another visually similar yet functionally different object. The slider is used to change values, but does not change the display or move the area that is shown as a scrollbar does.