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Notebook Formatting & Styling   (Mathematica Guide)
Mathematica notebooks include all the usual features of a top-quality word-processing system, plus many additional special capabilities. In all, there are over a thousand ...
Mathematica's symbolic architecture makes it unprecedentedly easy to create and manipulate sophisticated layouts for user interfaces—both as static structures and with ...
WindowToolbars   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
WindowToolbars is a notebook option that specifies the toolbars to include at the top of the window used to display the notebook on the screen.
Session Customization   (Mathematica Guide)
Mathematica allows almost every aspect of sessions to be customized, under full programmatic control.
TogglerBar   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
TogglerBar[x, {val_1, val_2, ...}] represents a toggler bar with setting x and with toggler buttons for values val_i to include in the list x.TogglerBar[Dynamic[x], {val_1, ...
Drawing Tools   (Mathematica Tutorial)
Type Ctrl+DynamicBox[If[$OperatingSystem === MacOSX, T, D], ImageSizeCache -> {9., {0., 8.}}] or choose Graphics > Drawing Tools. For more information on each tool, click the ...
Manipulator   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
Manipulator[x] represents a manipulator with setting x in the range 0 to 1. Manipulator[Dynamic[x]] takes the setting to be the dynamically updated current value of x, with ...
Creating Inspectors   (Mathematica Guide)
Mathematica's unified symbolic architecture and dynamic object mechanism makes possible a uniquely flexible form of direct-manipulation inspector, in which an arbitrary ...
Evaluation Control   (Mathematica Guide)
Mathematica normally takes any expression it is given, and evaluates it as far as possible. But built into the Mathematica language is a collection of flexible primitives ...
SetterBar   (Built-in Mathematica Symbol)
SetterBar[x, {val_1, val_2, ...}] represents a setter bar with setting x and with setter buttons for values val_i.SetterBar[Dynamic[x], {val_1, val_2, ...}] takes the setting ...
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