0 present participle of scroll
1 to move text or other information on a computer screen in order to see a different part of it:
Scroll to the end of the document.
The sequences of sounds and images vary in time but the user is always free to control the scrolling speed.
With the word graph menu, the architect can see all word graphs by scrolling back and forth through the strip of word graphs.
The control elements consisted of soundfile scrolling, random sequencing speed, loop length and playback speed.
They have identified features such as color, font size, scrolling, nominalization, graphics, and white space as contributing to the readability of online texts.
Selection from multiple branches of complex hierarchies causes lengthy hierarchies to be displayed, requiring scrolling of the display.
Additionally, the new system provides enhanced, mouse-driven, user control and a continuously scrolling output display.
To fit the form on one web page we had to create a long document that consequently needs a lot of scrolling.
An example is the familiar scrolling 'piano roll' display which features in most sequencing software.