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Coining new terms is wonderful, but tablets has meaning in the material
world which does not intuitively lead to the nested tabs you are referring
to.
As this sounds similar to the sub menus which open when you select a menu
option with a little arrow on the side, I would go with sub tabs, preferably
without the hyphen...
-----Original Message-----
From: Keith Soltys [mailto:ksoltys -at- INTERLOG -dot- COM]
Sent: Monday, March 01, 1999 5:43 PM
To: TECHWR-L -at- LISTSERV -dot- OKSTATE -dot- EDU
Subject: Nested tabs terminology
I need some advice about how to describe a particular user interface
element.
We are developing software that uses nested tab sets. Users of Microsoft
products will be familiar with tab sets in dialog boxes, such as the
Options dialog in MS Word, where clicking on a tab changes the underlying
dialog contents (property shee).
However, our developers have implemented something a little different in
that they have nested the tab sets. So, for example, you have two tabs in
a row, with three tabs in the second row. Clicking on the first tab in
the top row (call it tab A) displays tabs 1, 2, and 3 in the second row,
of
course each tab has its own properties. Clicking on tab B in the first row
displays tabs 4, 5, and 6 in the second row, instead of 1, 2, and 3.
My question is: what do you call the tabs in the second row?
Do you refer to them as tabs, as sub-tabs, or as something else (one of
our writers suggested tablets -- nice, but I'm hesitant to coin a new
term.)