0 a part on a machine, computer, etc. that is used to control something, for example the volume that something is played at:
1 a slide
2 a type of small sandwich, especially a small hamburger, served as a snack or at the start of a meal:
pork sliders
Different effects require different controls, and the interface adapts by assigning sliders and option buttons to specific parameters.
Finding positions of the sliders corresponds to an inverse kinematic solution when the pose of the platform is given.
The sliders interface, whilst it physically allowed people to control multiple parameters, forced the user to mentally 'strip apart' the control task into separate control streams.
In addition to the sliders, most tools can be 'trained', using the second mouse-button, to control the orientation of hatching or the length of a brush stroke.
A more recent study found that a multislider sometimes fared better than a bank of sliders with multiple selection, even when subjects could not verbalise how the multislider worked.
The rigid-body motion of sliders and intermediate linkages is derived from the given motion of the moving platform by solving inverse kinematics of the parallel manipulator.
We cannot afford to have any back-sliders in training.
The body is supported on beam over the amortizers, equipped by rubber dowel, through edge sliders; while serves only for transmitting horizontal forces.