Graphical User Interface
/ˌdʒiː-ˈjuː-ˈaɪ/
n. “Click, drag, and maybe accidentally close everything.”
GUI, short for Graphical User Interface, is the visual layer that sits atop software and operating systems, turning abstract commands into buttons, windows, menus, and icons. Where the command line requires memorization and precision, the GUI invites exploration, experimentation, and occasionally, confusion when multiple windows stack unexpectedly.
Cascading Style Sheets
/ˌsiː ɛs ˈɛs/
n. “Make it pretty, or at least legible.”
CSS, short for Cascading Style Sheets, is the language of visual expression on the web. It tells browsers how to render HTML content, dictating colors, fonts, spacing, layout, and even subtle animations. Without CSS, the web would be a monochrome, blocky, and unforgiving place — essentially plain-text chaos sprinkled with links.