The taskbar (overview)
In this articleThe taskbar is the long horizontal bar at the bottom of your screen. Unlike the desktop, which can get obscured by the windows on top of it, the taskbar is visible almost all the time. It has four main sections:
| • | The Start button , which opens the Start menu. See The Start menu (overview). |
| • | The Quick Launch toolbar, which lets you start programs with one click. |
| • | The middle section, which shows you which programs and documents you have open and allows you to quickly switch between them. |
| • | The notification area, which includes a clock and icons (small pictures) that communicate the status of certain programs and computer settings. |
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| The taskbar is located at the bottom of your screen |
You're likely to use the middle section of the taskbar the most, so we'll discuss that first.
Keep track of your windows
If you open more than one program or document at a time, you can quickly start piling up windows on your desktop. Because windows often cover each other or take up the whole screen, it's sometimes hard to see what else is underneath or remember what you've already opened.
That's where the taskbar comes in handy. Whenever you open a program, folder, or document, Windows creates a button on the taskbar corresponding to that item. The button shows the icon and name of the item. In the picture below, two programs are open—Calculator and Minesweeper—and each has its own button on the taskbar.
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| Each program has its own button on the taskbar |
Notice how the taskbar button for Minesweeper appears pressed in. That indicates that Minesweeper is the active window, meaning that it's in front of any other open windows and is ready for you to interact with.
To switch to another window, click its taskbar button. In our example, clicking the taskbar button for Calculator brings its window to the front:
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| Click a window's taskbar button to switch to that window |
Clicking taskbar buttons is only one of several ways to switch between windows. For more information, see Working with windows.
Minimize and restore windows
When a window is active (its taskbar button appears pressed down), clicking its taskbar button minimizes the window. That means that the window disappears from the desktop. Minimizing a window doesn't close it or delete its contents—it merely removes it from the desktop temporarily.
In the picture below, Calculator has been minimized, but not closed. You can tell it's still running because it has a button on the taskbar.
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| Minimizing Calculator leaves only its taskbar button visible |
You can also minimize a window by clicking the Minimize button, in the upper-right corner of the window:
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| Minimize button (left) |
To restore a minimized window (make it show up again on the desktop), click its taskbar button. For more information about these buttons, see Working with windows.
How the taskbar groups similar items
As you open more windows, you'll see existing taskbar buttons shrink in width to let new buttons squeeze in. However, if the taskbar becomes too crowded with buttons, then the buttons for the same program will be grouped into a single button.
To see how this works, suppose you have three Paint pictures open on the desktop. If the taskbar has enough room, it displays the three Paint windows as separate buttons:
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| Three Paint windows displayed as separate taskbar buttons |
But if you have many programs and documents open, the taskbar collapses these three buttons into a single button that shows the name of the group (Paint) and the number of items in the group (3). Clicking the button displays a menu listing the files in the group:
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| Three Paint windows grouped into one taskbar button |
Clicking one of the items in the menu activates its window so you can see it.
See previews of your open windows
When you move your mouse pointer to a taskbar button, a small picture appears that shows you a miniature version of the corresponding window. This preview, also called a thumbnail, is especially useful if you can't identify a window by its title alone. And if one of your windows has video or animation playing, you'll see it playing in the preview.
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| Pointing to a window's taskbar button displays a preview of the window |
When you point to a grouped taskbar button, you'll see a stack of previews, but only the topmost preview will be visible.
The Quick Launch toolbar
To the immediate right of the Start button is the Quick Launch toolbar. As its name implies, it lets you launch (start) programs with a single click. For example, click the Internet Explorer icon
to start Internet Explorer.
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| The Quick Launch toolbar sits to the right of the Start button |
You can customize the Quick Launch toolbar by adding your favorite programs to it. Locate the program in the Start menu, right-click it, and then click Add to Quick Launch. (If you don't see this option, you can also drag the program's icon to the Quick Launch toolbar.) The program's icon now appears in the toolbar. To remove an icon from the Quick Launch toolbar, right-click it, click Delete, and then click Yes.
By default, the Quick Launch toolbar also contains two special buttons. Click the Show Desktop button
to temporarily hide all open windows and show the desktop; click the button again to show all windows again. Click the Switch between windows button
to switch between open windows using Windows Flip 3D. For more information, see Working with windows.
The notification area
The notification area, on the far right side of the taskbar, includes a clock and a group of icons. It looks like this:
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| The notification area of the taskbar |
These icons communicate the status of something on your computer or provide access to certain settings. The set of icons you see depends on which programs or services you have installed and how your computer manufacturer set up your computer.
When you move your pointer to a particular icon, you will see that icon's name or the status of a setting. For example, pointing to the volume icon
shows the current volume level of your computer. Pointing to the network icon
displays information about whether you are connected to a network, the connection speed, and the signal strength.
Double-clicking an icon in the notification area usually opens the program or setting associated with it. For example, double-clicking the volume icon opens the volume controls. Double-clicking the network icon opens Network and Sharing Center.
Occasionally, an icon in the notification area will display a small pop-up window (called a notification) to notify you about something. For example, after adding a new hardware device to your computer, you might see this:
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| The notification area displays a message after new hardware is installed |
Click the Close button
in the upper-right corner of the notification to dismiss it. If you don't do anything, the notification will fade away on its own after a few seconds.
To reduce clutter, Windows hides icons in the notification area when you haven't used them in a while. If icons become hidden, click the Show hidden icons button to temporarily display the hidden icons.
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| Click the Show hidden icons button to display all icons in the notification area |
Customize the taskbar
There are many ways to customize the taskbar to suit your preferences. For example, you can move the entire taskbar to the left, right, or top edge of the screen. You can make the taskbar larger, have Windows automatically hide it when you're not using it, and add toolbars to it. For more information, see the following topics:
Taskbar
The area of the desktop that contains the Start button and buttons for all open programs. By default, the taskbar is located at the bottom of the desktop, but you can move it.
Program
A set of instructions that a computer uses to perform a specific task, such as word processing, accounting, or data management. Also called an application.
Notification area
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Notification area
The area on the right side of the Windows taskbar. It contains shortcuts to programs and important status information.
Icon
A small picture that represents a file, folder, program, or other object or function.
Window
A rectangular area on a computer screen in which programs and content appear. A window can be moved, resized, minimized, or closed.
Quick Launch toolbar
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Drag
To move an item on the screen by selecting the item and then pressing and holding down the mouse button while moving the mouse. For example, you can move a window to another location on the screen by dragging its title bar.
Desktop
The work area on a computer screen that simulates the top of an actual desk. You can arrange icons on the desktop, such as the Recycle Bin and shortcuts to programs, files, folders, and various types of documents, just as you would arrange real objects on top of a desk.