更新时间:2021-07-16 18:03:12
封面
101 UX Principles
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Preface
Chapter #1. Anyone Can Be a User Experience (UX) Professional
Learning points
Chapter #2. Don't Use More Than Two Typefaces
Chapter #3. Users Already Have Fonts on Their Computers So Use Them
Chapter #4. USE TYPE SIZE TO DEPICT INFORMATION HIERARCHY
Headline that tells you something
Chapter #5. Use a Sensible Default Size for Body Copy
Chapter #6. Use an Ellipsis to Indicate That There's a Further Step
Chapter #7. Make Your Buttons Look Like Buttons
Chapter #8. Make Buttons a Sensible Size and Group Them Together by Function
Chapter #9. Make the Whole Button Clickable Not Just the Text
Chapter #10. Don't Invent New Arbitrary Controls
Chapter #11. Search Should be a Text Field with a Button Labeled "Search"
Chapter #12. Sliders Should Be Used Only for Non-Quantifiable Values
Chapter #13. Use Numeric Entry Fields for Precise Integers
Chapter #14. Don't Use a Drop-Down Menu If You Only Have a Few Options
Learning points:
Chapter #15. Allow Users to Undo Destructive Actions
Chapter #16. Think About What's Just off the Screen
Chapter #17. Use "Infinite Scroll" for Feed–Style Content Only
Chapter #18. If Your Content Has a Beginning Middle and End Use Pagination
Chapter #19. If You Must Use Infinite Scroll Store the User's Position and Return to It
Chapter #20. Make "Blank Slates" More Than Just Empty Views
Chapter #21. Make "Getting Started" Tips Easily Dismissable
Chapter #22. When a User Refreshes a Feed Move Them to the Last Unread Item
Chapter #23. Don't Hide Items Away in a "Hamburger" Menu
Chapter #24. Make Your Links Look Like Links
Chapter #25. Split Menu Items Down into Subsections so Users Don't Have to Remember Large Lists
Chapter #26. Hide "Advanced" Settings From Most Users
Chapter #27. Repeat Menu Items in the Footer or Lower Down in the View
Chapter #28. Use Consistent Icons Across the Product
Chapter #29. Don't Use Obsolete Icons
Chapter #30. Don't Try to Depict a New Idea With an Existing Icon
Chapter #31. Never Use Text on Icons
Chapter #32. Always Give Icons a Text Label
Chapter #33. Emoji are the Most Recognized Icon Set on Earth
Chapter #34. Use Device-Native Input Features Where Possible
Chapter #35. Obfuscate Passwords in Fields but Provide a "Show Password" Toggle
Chapter #36. Always Allow the User to Paste into Password Fields
Chapter #37. Don't Attempt to Validate Email Addresses
Chapter #38. Don't Ever Clear User-Entered Data Unless Specifically Asked To
Chapter #39. Pick a Sensible Size for Multiline Input Fields
Chapter #40. Don't Ever Make Your UI Move While a User is Trying to Use It
Chapter #41. Use the Same Date Picker Controls Consistently
Chapter #42. Pre-fill the Username in "Forgot Password" Fields
Chapter #43. Be Case-Insensitive
Chapter #44. If a Good Form Experience Can Be Delivered Your Users will Love Your Product
Chapter #45. Validate Data Entry as Soon as Possible