The Three Kinds of Windows

Computer Basics
for WIT 2001
The Main Page for Comp Basics

 

Click here if you need the introduction to windows on Windows.

Contents

The Three Kinds of Windows
The three states of a window
Activity 1-Minimize and Restore
Maximize and Share -- The Explanation
Activity 2-Maximize and Share
The Three States of a Windows window

First some explanation then some activities:

The Three Kinds of Windows

The MS Windows OS has three different kinds of windows:

Directory / Sub-Direcotry / Folder Window

  • If you open a folder or hard drive / floppy disk, etc., you get this kind of window

This kind of window allows you to see the contents of the folder or hard drive / floppy disk, etc.

Application Window

  • If you launch an application you get an application window

Whenever you open / launch / run an application a window opens that is that application. There'll be a menu bar under the title bar and perhaps toolbars and then a document window below that.

Document Window

  • Almost all applications may have one (or more) document windows within their application window.
You use document windows within application windows in order to create or edit documents. Here's an example of a Document Window (contained in the Microsoft Word application program window):

An application program window (MS Word) containing a document window.

 

In the Windows OS, you can individually manipulate multiple document windows within an application window.

Note:

The Mac doesn't handle windows in this same way.

The three states of a window

Now that you've seen the different kinds of windows, here's the different ways that those windows display:

Each directory window or application window or document window can display in three different ways in Windows 95 and 98 and beyond. Explanations, illustrations and activities follow.

Below is an overview of the upper right hand corner of every window. Click on this image to open another web browser window of a bigger version of this same image. When you're done looking at that more readable image, close that window and you'll be back here!

A Windows window exalained

Activity 1-Minimize and Restore

Minimize and Restore

1) Open the Directory window for the My Computer icon by double-clicking on it. That icon is usually in the upper left of the desktop.

2) Put the pointer over the Minimize button on the Title Bar as in the illustration below.

Below you can see both the My Computer window and, on the task bar (down below), the My Computer Tab. (Yes, those thingys on the task bar are called "Tabs".) And the white pointer arrow is over the Minimize button on the Title Bar.

3) Click on the Minimize button in the upper right of the window. Note that the window disappears until it's only a button on the task bar, looking like this:

4) To get the window back, click on the My Computer Tab on the Task Bar. This will make the window come back and be visible again. This is called "Restoring" a window. Minimize / Restore....

Try this several times with different windows.

Maximize and Share -- The Explanation

We've used the "X" or Close button, you just worked with the Minimize button, let's now look at the third button, the one between the X and the Minimize.

Here are the steps, click here to see a narrative overview with illustrations.

The third, middle, button actually has two different looks:

Look 1) "Click me to Maximize (take over the whole screen)"

Look 2) "Click me to share the screen with other windows"

You can toggle or switch any standard window between these states.

Activity 2-Maximize and Share

1) Have the My Computer window open again.

2) Click the Maximize window button on the Title Bar and two things happen:

a) the button will change and

b) the window will switch from taking over the whole screen to sharing the desktop with other windows or from sharing with other windows taking over the whole screen.

Try this with several different windows.

 

Here's another illustration and explanation of the three states for a window.

Window Sate 1: A button on the Task Bar

  • All folder and application windows get a button on the Task Bar along the bottom of the screen
    • Document windows do not get their own buttons on the task bar since they are within application windows.
  • You can click on the buttons on the Task Bar to switch between the different windows
A Windows window only as a tab on the Task Bar

A window that shares the screen

  • You can set a window so that you can see more than one window at a time
A Windows windows that shares with other windows and the desktop

A window that takes over all the screen

  • You can set a window so that it takes over the screen

A Windows window that has taken over the whole screen!
 
 

Click here for a related lesson on how to scroll around in a window.
 
 

The Previous Step

Back to Home for Basics

The Next Step
 

The contents of the Web Institute Web Site, including the On-Line Curriculum, Web Tank, and Session Notes, are Copyright 1999-2001, Graham School of General Studies, University of Chicago. No one may print, copy, or otherwise reproduce these materials without the express written permission of the Director of the Web Institute for Teachers or the Dean of the Graham School. All rights reserved.