Palette Window

A palette window, also known as utility window or floating palette, is a type of computing window which floats on top of all regular windows and offers ready access tools, commands or information for the current application.

Applications use palette windows to prevent toolbar clutter. While toolbars and ribbons are typically horizontal, locked to window or screen borders, and of fixed length; palettes are usually scaled to fit their contents, movable, and vertical, consuming less of a computer's commonly landscape oriented screen space, and working better with multiple monitors.

Some palettes are standard and provided by the OS, reappearing in many applications, while other palettes are unique to each individual application. An example of a common application-specific palette window is an inspector window. On the Macintosh, palette windows are only visible while their parent application is in focus. In an MDI program, palettes are sometimes independent from the parent window.

GUI widgets
Command input
  • Button
  • Context menu
  • Menu
  • Pie menu
Data input-output
  • Checkbox
  • Combo box
  • Cycle button
  • Drop-down list
  • Grid view
  • List box
  • Radio button
  • Scrollbar
  • Slider
  • Spinner
  • Search box
  • Text box
Informational
  • Balloon help
  • Heads-up display in computing
  • Heads-up display in video games
  • Icon
  • Infobar
  • Label
  • Loading screen
  • Progress bar
  • Sidebar
  • Splash screen
  • Status bar
  • Throbber
  • Toast
  • Tooltip
Containers
  • Accordion
  • Disclosure widget
  • Frame/Fieldset
  • Menu bar
  • Panel
  • Ribbon
  • Tab
  • Toolbar
  • Window
Navigational
  • Address bar
  • Breadcrumb
  • Hyperlink
  • Tree view
Special windows
  • About box
  • Alert dialog box
  • Dialog box
  • File dialog
  • Inspector window
  • Modal window
  • Palette window
Related concepts
  • Layout manager
  • Look and feel
  • Mouseover
  • Widget toolkit
  • WIMP

Famous quotes containing the words palette and/or window:

    The great God endows His children variously. To some he gives intellect—and they move the earth. To some he allots heart—and the beating pulse of humanity is theirs. But to some He gives only a soul, without intelligence—and these, who never grow up, but remain always His children, are God’s fools, kindly, elemental, simple, as if from His palette the Artist of all had taken one color instead of many.
    Mary Roberts Rinehart (1876–1958)

    As the end of the century approaches, all our culture is like the culture of flies at the beginning of winter. Having lost their agility, dreamy and demented, they turn slowly about the window in the first icy mists of morning. They give themselves a last wash and brush-up, their ocellated eyes roll, and they fall down the curtains.
    Jean Baudrillard (b. 1929)