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Basic Browser Tools

The document discusses basic navigation tools in browsers including back and forward arrow buttons, refresh button, new tab button, address bar, resizing and closing buttons, menu button, and hyperlinks. It provides descriptions and examples of how each tool is used.

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Rudne Padua
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
22 views

Basic Browser Tools

The document discusses basic navigation tools in browsers including back and forward arrow buttons, refresh button, new tab button, address bar, resizing and closing buttons, menu button, and hyperlinks. It provides descriptions and examples of how each tool is used.

Uploaded by

Rudne Padua
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Basic Browser Tools

LEARNING OBJECTIVES

• Identify basic navigation tools used in a browser.

Now that you are familiar with what the three main browsers look like, where to locate
them, and how to open them, it’s time to learn a few of the basic tools to navigate and
use a browser window. Even though we are the Chrome browser as an example to show
these tools, they can be used in almost any browser.

1. Arrow Buttons. These two arrows navigate the browser back (the left
arrow) to a previously viewed webpage or forward (the right arrow) to more
currently viewed webpages. These buttons can be pushed more than once
to cause the browser to go back or forward further to web pages rendered in
a browser session’s history.
2. Refresh Button. This button reloads a webpage. Refreshing will update
the information on a webpage if it has changed. If a webpage has not
completely loaded, refreshing will reload the page so that it completely
renders on the screen.
3. New Tab Button. Opens a new page in the same window when selected.
This option allows for many websites to be open but contained within one
main window frame. This keeps the desktop from being cluttered with too
many open windows.
4.
A browser with many tabs open will look to this.

5. Address Bar. This text field on a browser that identifies the webpage
currently being viewed in a browser window. All address bars are located at
the top of the browser window. A user can type in a new address to navigate
to a new webpage. Each website on the internet is reached by a web address
known as a URL (Uniform Resource Locator) that references a specific
location on the internet. Type a URL into the address bar of a browser, then
press the Enter (Return) key on the keyboard to make the browser load the
webpage associated with the URL. As browsers have gotten more
sophisticated, most do not require for http:// or even the www to be typed in
order for the webpage to be discovered.
6. Resizing and Closing Buttons. As covered in Common Terminology,
these buttons allow a user to change the size of a browser window.

a. Minimize Button. Represented by an underscore in the upper right corner of the window. When
minimized, the browser will remain on the taskbar but not be visibly open on the desktop.

b. Maximize Button. Represented by a square in the upper right corner of the window. When
maximized, a browser window will enlarge a window, typically filling the entire computer screen.
c. Close Browser Button. The button in the upper right corner which is an X will terminate a
browser session. This button allows a user to quickly close a browser window when they are
finished surfing the internet. Note: If there are multiple tab windows open a browser it will usually
ask if you want to close all of the tabs before shutting down the browser.

7. Menu Button. In Chrome, the menu is indicated by three vertical dots in


the upper right corner of the browser window (Edge uses three horizontal
dots; Firefox uses three stacked horizontal lines). Once the menu button is
selected a dropdown menu will appear.

Dropdown Menu. Once the menu button (#1) is clicked, it will display a dropdown menu (#2) with
a variety of choices.
Hyperlinks

A hyperlink (also called a link) is a section of text, an image, graphic or icon that is
linked to a specific webpage, image, file or object. This is commonly seen in a browser
as text, often a blue color.

Once the link is selected, the webpage automatically navigates to the linked webpage,
icon, image, graphic or file. This is one of the main tools used when conducting a
search on the web.

Bonus Tool

If you are ever asked by a support technician for the version of your browser, a quick
way to discover your version is to go to this
website http://www.whatsmybrowser.org/. It will tell you the browser type and
additional information (like the operating system you are working with on your computer)
so you know how your browser is configured.
Reference: https://courses.lumenlearning.com/wm-compapp/chapter/basic-browser-tools/

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