radio button

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radio button

A selectable button on a web page. A radio button is small and round and, once clicked, has a black dot in the center.
Dictionary of Unfamiliar Words by Diagram Group Copyright © 2008 by Diagram Visual Information Limited
Translations
Radiobutton
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References in periodicals archive
This includes sliders (range), checkboxes and radio buttons. As customers fill in the quote calculator, leads are sent directly to the business' email address.
In this study, five group radio buttons were displayed at the bottom of the screen: "Landmarks," "Sectioned (Anterior)," "Outlined (Anterior)," "Sectioned (Lateral)," and "Outlined (Lateral)." The five buttons were connected with five groups of images: peeled images with anatomic landmarks, creases and wrinkles, and fat compartments; peeled images at 0[degrees]; peeled outlined images at 0[degrees]; peeled images at 60[degrees]; and peeled outlined images at 60[degrees].
As a matter of common practice, the presentence investigation report ("PSR") includes a number of potential conditions of supervised release, with radio buttons the probation officer checks to indicate those recommended to the district court at sentencing.
The developer can customize the Settings dialog with Section names, Edit fields, Checkboxes, Radio buttons, Popup menus or Combobox fields.
She added: "We then had to press our emergency radio buttons for backup because during the struggle with Mr Carroll, Mr Carson had climbed out of the car window and then ran away over a grassy bank nearby and into the darkness, but we couldn't leave Mr Carroll in the state he was in."
In fact the two items that are definitely round are the wheels and the radio buttons.
In fact, the two items that are definitely round are the wheels and the radio buttons.
The increasing trend toward data-driven healthcare has led to a misguided focus on keyboard- and mouse-driven, templated structured data entry that overburdens the physician with a plethora of check boxes, radio buttons and drop-down menus -with significant risk of reduced quality of documentation when there is heavy use of standard EHR templates and copy-and-paste tools.
This naturally includes typical text boxes and radio buttons in conventional HTML, but also includes more advanced visual elements like tabs, tooltips, and accordions (which display rolled-up information when clicking a title).
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