Introduction to the Second EditionPreface1. What Users Do A Means to an End The Basics of User Research Users' Motivation to Learn The Patterns Safe Exploration Instant Gratification Satisficing Changes in Midstream Deferred Choices Incremental Construction Habituation Microbreaks Spatial Memory Prospective Memory Streamlined Repetition Keyboard Only Other People's Advice Personal Recommendations2. Organizing the Content: Information Architecture and Application Structure The Big Picture The Patterns Feature, Search, and Browse News Stream Picture Manager Dashboard Canvas Plus Palette Wizard Settings Editor A|ternatNe Views Many Workspaces Multi-Level Help3. Getting Around: Navigation, Signposts, and Wayfinfling Staying Found The Cost of Navigation Navigational Models Design Conventions for Websites The Patterns Clear Entry Points Menu Page Pyramid Modal Panel Deep-linked State Escape Hatch Fat Menus Sitemap Footer Sign-in Tools Sequence Map Breadcrumbs Annotated Scrollbar Animated Transition4. Organizing the Page: Layout of Page Elements The Basics of Page Layout The Patterns Visual Framework Center Stage Grid of Equals Titled Sections Module Tabs Accordion Collapsible Panels Movable Panels Right/Left Alignment Diagonal Balance Responsive Disclosure Responsive Enabling Liquid Layout 5. Lists of Things Use Cases for Lists Back to Information Architecture Some Solutions The Patterns Two- Panel Selector One-Window Drilldown List Inlay Thumbnail Grid Carousel Row Striping Pagination lump to Item Alphabet ScroUer Cascading Lists Tree Table New-Item Row6. Doing Things:Actions and Commands Pushing the Boundaries The Patterns Button Groups Hover Tools Action Panel Prominent "Done" Button Smart Menu Items Preview Progress Indicator Cancelability Multi-Level Undo Command History Macros7. Showing Complex Data: Trees, Charts, and Other Information Graphics The Basics of Information Graphics The Patterns Overview Plus Detail Datatips Data Spotlight Dynamic Queries Data Brushing Local Zooming Sortable Table Radial Table Multi-Y Graph Small Multiples Treemap8. Getting Input from Users: Forms and Controls The Basics of Form Design Control Choice The Patterns Forgiving Format Structured Format Fill-in-the-Blanks Input Hints Input Prompt Password Strength Meter Autocompletion Dropdown Chooser List Builder Good Defaults Same-Page Error Messages9. Using SociaI Media What This Chapter Does Not Cover The Basics of Social Media The Patterns Editorial Mix Personal Voices Repost and Comment Conversation Starters Inverted Nano-pyramid Timing Strategy Specialized Streams Social Links Sharing Widget News Box Content Leaderboard Recent Chatter10. Going Mobile The Challenges of Mobile Design The Patterns Vertical Stack Filmstrip Touch Tools Bottom Navigation Thumbnail-and-Text List Infinite List Generous Borders Text Clear Button Loading Indicators Richly Connected Apps Streamlined Branding11. Making It Look Goofl: Visual Style and Aesthetics Same Content, Different Styles The Basics of Visual Design What This Means for Desktop Applications The Patterns Deep Background Few Hues, Many Values Corner Treatments Borders That Echo Fonts Hairlines Contrasting Font Weights Skins and Themes ReferencesIndex
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很早就知道这本书了。看到有不少人都有很高的评价,自然心里的期望值也比较高,但是一直没找到书(只有英文电子版,我又不太喜欢看电子版的,而且英文看得要慢一些)。后来在一个偶然的机会在深圳图书馆被我找到了,不尽狂喜,有种如获至宝的感觉。当时还一起借了本Cooper的《...
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这本书的原文和中文我都看了,也比较过。本书的原版,作者遣词用句似乎过于力求准确,导致阅读起来多少有些拗口。Windy在翻译的时候也没有使用符合中文的语言习惯,所以即使是中文版读起来也是很费力的。 相比起来Windy之前翻的《don't make me think》和《交互设计之路》就远...
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Windy在开始讲到,很多软件界面和交互的设计,都是和现实世界相对应的。同时,又根据电脑的特性加以改进和创新。比如页签就是一个现实中的一个传统应用,被移植到软件中形成一个页签控件。 模式最早应该来自于人类对自然界事物的直观认识。比如看到一棵树,我们就定义...
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这是一本交互设计的入门书籍。作者Jenifer Tidwell以设计模式的方式向读者展示了如何设计出更优秀的交互系统。 对于一个成员并不完备的团队在开发一个新产品时,经常会出现下面两种情况: 1.以图形设计师为中心。常见的情况是开发Web站点,设计师和客户商量...
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这本书就属于那种,新手应该放在手边常查阅的东西,作者把搜集来的案例汇集起来,结构化分门别类,不同的模式分别介绍它是什么、什么时候用、怎么用,实在是非常良心的。虽然可能不全面,但是还是很好用 废话不多说,我这周末顺着作者的意做了个思维导图, 把每个模式都附上简...