This Windows application is meant to be a total replacement for the Start Menu. Eventually, it might grow to be a replacement for the entire shell (explorer). Commands can be executed single or double clicking. This allows you to easily have 10 to 50 commands or more accessible in one click.
It features Tcl/Tk support via TclBridge, drag and drop, COM plugin support with event hooking (please see http://www.liquidtoolbar.com/plugins.html ), DDE support, "floating" command support, nested commands, auto-hide, and full scriptability.
It features Tcl/Tk support via TCLBridge, drag and drop, COM plugin support with event hooking (please see http://www.tclbridge.com/toolbar/Plugins.html ), DDE support, "floating" command support, nested commands, auto-hide, and full scriptability.
A 30-day trial version is available for download at (always updated):
Version 5.69.286; June 4, 2003; 6421687 bytes
http://www.tclbridge.com/toolbar/TclToolbar.zip
Here are some screenshots:
The splash screen...
The default main toolbar...
The main toolbar configured a little differently (3 rows and 4 columns)...
This shows a command that has a sub-commands menu (children):
This shows the same sub-commands menu as above, using command names instead of codes:
The main toolbar in "shade" mode...
The command editor...
The available command flags...
The options window...
The plugins window...
The command "prompt"...
The command history selector...
The mini script editor...
The main context menu...
The context menu for commands...
The context menu for floating commands...
Was also known as "Joe's Really Spiffy Tcl/Tk Toolbar". It is now known as LiquidToolbar.
NOTE: Also known as "Joe's Really Spiffy Tcl/Tk Toolbar" RS Was surprised to hear that the above widgetry was all implemented in Visual Basic...
Joe Mistachkin Actually, it uses Visual Basic for the front-end, Visual C++ for TclBridge, and Tcl/Tk scripts to automate it. The COM plugins/hooks can be written in any COM component producing language.
Joe Mistachkin Actually, it uses Visual Basic for the front-end, Visual C++ for TCLBridge, and Tcl/Tk scripts to automate it. The COM plugins/hooks can be written in any COM component producing language.