This is event-driven because you are enable to save a document or file if you don’t click the save button. For example, if you create a presentation using Microsoft PowerPoint and you don’t click save, the file will be completely lost and you would have to start again, whereas if you click on the save button, which is normally at the top, the file will be saved on your computer at the destination you saved it at. This means you can open that same file and the presentation will be there with all you work on it. This is event-driven because you are clicking save and the Windows operating system will respond by saving your
This is event-driven because you are enable to save a document or file if you don’t click the save button. For example, if you create a presentation using Microsoft PowerPoint and you don’t click save, the file will be completely lost and you would have to start again, whereas if you click on the save button, which is normally at the top, the file will be saved on your computer at the destination you saved it at. This means you can open that same file and the presentation will be there with all you work on it. This is event-driven because you are clicking save and the Windows operating system will respond by saving your