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E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, 454 Seiten

Grant 101 UX Principles – 2nd edition

Actionable Solutions for Product Design Success
2. Auflage 2022
ISBN: 978-1-80323-051-1
Verlag: De Gruyter
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection

Actionable Solutions for Product Design Success

E-Book, Englisch, 454 Seiten

ISBN: 978-1-80323-051-1
Verlag: De Gruyter
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection



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Table of Contents - Everyone Can Be Great at UX
- Be Strategic About Using These Principles
- Don
- Use A/B Testing To Test Your Ideas
- Test with Real Users
- Nobody Cares About Your Brand
- Don't Use More Than Two Typefaces
- Users Already Have Fonts on Their Computers, So Use Them
- Use Type Size and Weight to Depict an Information Hierarchy
- Use a Sensible Default Size for Body Copy
- Use an Ellipsis to Indicate That There's a Further Step
- Make Interactive Elements Obvious and Discoverable
- Make Buttons a Sensible Size and Group Them Together by Function
- Make the Whole Button Clickable, Not Just the Text
- Don
- Search Should be a Text Field with a Button Labeled "Search"
- Sliders Should Be Used for Non-Quantifiable Values Only
- Use Numeric Entry Fields for Precise Integers
- Don't Use a Drop-Down Menu If You Only Have a Few Options
- Allow Users to Undo Destructive Actions
- Optimise your interface for mobile
- Use "Infinite Scroll" for Feed
- If Your Content Has a Beginning, Middle and End, Use Pagination
- Allow Users to Accept or Reject Cookies with One Click
- Help users understand their next steps from "Empty States"
- Make "Getting Started" Tips Easily Dismissable
- When a User Refreshes a Feed, Move Them to the Last Unread Item
- Don't Hide Items Away in a "Hamburger" Menu
- Make Your Links Look Like Links
- Split Menu Items Down Into Subsections, so Users Don
- Categorize Settings in an Accessible Way
- Repeat Menu Items in the Footer or Lower Down in the View
- Use Consistent Icons Across the Product
- Don't Use Obsolete Icons
- Don
- Never Use Text on Icons
- Always Give Icons a Text Label
- Use Device-Native Input Features Where Possible
- Streamline Creating and Entering Passwords
- Always Allow the User to Paste into Password Fields
- Don't Attempt to Validate Email Addresses
- Respect Users
- Pick a Sensible Size for Multiline Input Fields
- Use Animation with Care in User Interfaces
- Use the Same Date Picker Controls Consistently
- Pre-Fill the Username in

- Make Your Input Systems Case-Insensitive
- Chatbots Are Usually a Bad Idea
- If Your Forms Are Good, Your Product Is Good
- Validate Data Entry as Soon as Possible
- If the Form Fails Validation, Show the User Which Field Needs Their Attention
- Users Don
- Pick the Right Control for the Job
- Allow Users to Enter Phone Numbers However They Wish
- Use Dropdowns Sensibly for Date Entry
- Capture the Bare Minimum When Requesting Payment Card Details
- Make it Easy for Users to Enter Postal or ZIP Codes
- Don't Add Decimal Places to Currency Input
- Make It Painless for the User to Add Images
- Use a

- Show a Numeric Progress Indicator on the Progress Bar
- Show a

- Contrast Ratios Are Your Friends
- If You Must Use

- Avoid Ambiguous Symbols
- Make Links Make Sense Out of Context
- Add "Skip to Content" Links Above the Header and Navigation
- Never Use Color Alone to Convey Information
- If You Turn off Device Zoom with a Meta Tag, You
- Give Navigation Elements a Logical Tab Order
- Write Clear Labels for Controls
- Make Tappable Areas Finger-Sized
- Let Users Turn off Specific Notifications
- Each Aspect of a User
- The User Should Always Know What Stage They Are at in Any Given Journey
- Use Breadcrumb Navigation
- Users Rarely Care About Your Company
- Follow the Standard E-Commerce Pattern
- Show an Indicator If the User
- Let Users Give Feedback, but Don
- Don't Use a Vanity Splash Screen
- Make Your Favicon Distinctive
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Grant Will:

Will Grant is a British UI/UX expert and a digital product designer. He is a web technology entrepreneur with over 25 years' experience, leading teams (and products) at the intersection of technology and usability. After his Computer Science degree, Will trained with Jakob Nielsen and Bruce Tognazzini at the Nielsen Norman Group – the world leaders in usable design. Since then, Will has overseen the user experience and interaction design of several large-scale web sites and apps, reaching over a billion users in the process. Will is a "design purist" and obsessed with building beautiful, compelling, and familiar products that customers intuitively know how to use.



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