Especially, in modern use, the glass in one compartment of a window sash; a windowpane.
A section of the program window. PowerPoint in Normal view has 3 panes: Navigation which shows either the outline or thumbnails of the slides, Slide, and Notes. In addition, the Office Task Pane is displayed when needed.
a unit of stamps cut from a full sheet, either for assembly into booklets, or for individual sale at post offices. Sheets intended to be cut into panes for assembly into booklets will each produce a large number of relatively small panes, typically 30, 40, or 60. Sheets intended for division into panes to be sold individually are divided into fewer but larger panes. Many early sheets consisted of only two panes. Most 20th century sheets consisted of four panes. Modern sheets consist of six or more panes. Panes are commonly, but inaccurately, referred to by the public as sheets.
A portion of a window in the Lyngby toolbox that contains buttons that are related to each other. The Load New Data... window has three panes for the data parameters, external influences and the window control buttons.
A sheet of glass designed for use in a window. See Light and Glazing.
A separate area in a split window.
A portion of the PowerPoint window that displays specific slide information - typically the outline, one slide, and notes.
A pane is the largest portion of an editor window, used to display the contents of a buffer.
A sheet of glass for glazing a window. After installation, the pane is referred to as a 'light' (lite) or 'window light.'
A portion of a divided window.
Part of a sheet of stamps, usually separated by ‘gutter' margins.
A named user interface, displayed inside a dialog window, that represents the settings for a group of closely related features.
A region within a window that displays specific information. Desktop and Class Plus use four distinct panes: the Document pane, the Table of Contents pane, the Hit List pane, and the Reference pane. All panes are stored in an Infobase Window. Compare with Window.
A sub-window within the main window of the ArgoUML user interface.
the four section division of a sheet of stamps
a framed sheet of glass within a frame
A subwindow in a program; some common panes in PowerPoint are the Slide pane, Notes pane, task pane, and Preview areas of dialog boxes.
sheet glass cut in shapes for windows or doors
a rectangular space in the debugger window forming a view area
a window stacked on top of the WaveBar that can contain for example a waveform, a spectrogram, a pitch-curve, a time axis or a transcription or something else
A specialized sheet that understands issues pertaining to space requirements. A pane appears as the child of a frame or of another pane. Composite panes can hold other panes; leaf panes cannot.
A formation or group of stamps within the sheet. Also see 'Booklet pane'.
A single piece of glass, also called a light.
The proper name for a sheet of stamps sold at a post office. Most panes include a plate number and other markings in the margin or selvage.
A single section of glass.
A distinct area of a window.
a piece of glass in a window.
A piece of flat sheet glass used for glazing windows.
Part of a sheet of stamps divided by a margin from the remainder of the sheet. Also, Booklet pane.
One of usually four or six groupings of stamps which go to make up a full sheet. Commonly referred to, ( in error) as a sheet.
A pane is a subdivision of a window. For example, the Nautilus window contains a side pane and a view pane.
A single piece of glass within a window or door.
One of the compartments of a door or window consisting of a single sheet of glass in a frame; also, a sheet of glass.
Blocks of stamps issued in Stamp Books or Prestige Stamp Books.
A part of a window that is devoted to a specific function.
Stamps come off the press in large sheets known as press sheets. These are cut into smaller sheets called panes, before being sent to post offices for sale to the public.
A framed sheet of glass within a window.
The unit into which a full press sheet is divided before sale at post offices. What a post office customer may refer to as a "sheet of stamps" is more properly called a pane. Most United States full sheets are divided into four or more regular panes or many more booklet panes before they are shipped to post offices.
A portion of a window. Most programs display panes, so you can view two different parts of a document at the same time.
Stamps are often printed in large sheets which are cut apart for convenience in handling at the post office where they are sold. Pane is used to describe the complete sheetlet after being cut apart for sale. Individual small sheets of stamps included in booklets are termed panes as well.
A glass surface in a window. A window may include a number of panes or may consist of a single pane.
A part of the large sheet as printed. In regular U.S. stamps, the printing is in units of 400, cut into panes of 100 for sale.
A full "sheet" of stamps as sold by a Post Office. Four panes typically make up the original sheet of stamps as printed.
A major separate area of a window or dialog box, usually used for display rather than data entry.
The area of glass that fits in the window frame.
A portion of the document window bounded by and separated from other portions by vertical or horizontal bars. ንጥሠሰáŠá‹µ View