Week 2 Web Site Design Principles
2 Design for the Computer Medium Craft the look and feel Make your design portable Design for low bandwidth Plan for clear presentation and easy access to your information
3 Craft the Look and Feel The interface that the user must navigate is called the look and feel of a Web site Users look and feel when they explore the information design of your site Plan for a deliberate look and feel
4 Make Your Design Portable Make your Web site design portable and accessible across different browsers, operating systems, and computer platforms Remember to test your work even when you feel confident of your results
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7 Design for Low Bandwidth Plan your pages so that they are accessible at a variety of connection speeds If your pages download slowly because they contain large, detailed graphics or complicated animations, your users will leave before they ever see your content
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9 Plan for Easy Access to Your Information Your information design is the single most important factor in determining the success of your site The goal is to organize your content and present it as a meaningful, navigable set of information Your navigation options should present a variety of choices to users without detracting from their quests for information
10 Plan for Clear Presentation of Your Information Design your information so it is easier to read Break text into reasonable segments that make for easier on-screen reading Keep the “seven (plus or minus two)” rule of information design in mind
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12 Create a Unified Site Design Plan the unifying themes and structures Create smooth transitions Use a grid to provide visual structure Use active white space
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15 Plan Smooth Transitions Plan to create a unified look Reinforce the identifying elements Avoid random, jarring changes in format
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18 Use a Grid to Provide Visual Structure The grid is a conceptual layout device that organizes content into columns and rows A grid provides visual consistency HTML authors use the table elements to build the grid for their pages CSS will eventually replace tables for layout
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20 Use Active White Space Use white space deliberately in your design Good use of white space guides the reader and defines the areas of your page Active white space is an integral part of your design that structures and separates content
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23 Design for the User Keep your design efforts centered solely around your user Design for interaction Design for location Guide the user’s eye Decide whether the user will read or scan
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27 Design for Interaction Think about how the user wants to interact with your information Design for your content type Decide whether the user is likely to read or scan your pages
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30 Design for Location Rank the information you want to display Assign location based on the relative areas of screen importance
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33 Guide the User’s Eye Plan the design to guide the user’s eye Focus the user’s attention by object placement, text weight, and color use
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38 Keep a Flat Hierarchy Provide plenty of linking options Provide location information Use plenty of textual links Don’t overload the user with too much content Design for accessibility
39 Use the Power of Hypertext Linking Add clickable text and images where necessary to guide users through your information Provide plenty of links to let the user get around quickly
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42 How Much Content is Enough? Be conscious of the cognitive load of the user Separate content into smaller portions Use hypertext linking to divide content between pages
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44 Design for Accessibility Develop Web pages that remain accessible despite any physical, sensory, and cognitive disabilities Developing accessible content naturally leads to creating good design Follow W3 Accessibility Initiative guidelines at
45 WCAG Guidelines Perceivable — Information and user interface components must be perceivable by users Operable — User interface components must be operable by users Understandable — Information about the user interface and its operation must be understandable by users Robust — Content must be robust enough to be interpreted reliably by a wide variety of user agents, including assistive technologies
46 WCAG Guidelines - Perceivable Provide text alternatives for any non-text content so that it can be changed into other forms people need, such as large print, Braille, speech, symbols, or simpler language Provide synchronized alternatives for multimedia (i.e., transcripts of audio, descriptions of videos) Create content that can be presented in different ways (for example, spoken aloud, simpler layout) without losing information or structure. Make it easier for people with disabilities to see and hear content, including separating foreground from background
47 WCAG Guidelines - Operable Make all functionality available from a keyboard Provide users who have disabilities enough time to read and use content (i.e., text scrolls) Do not create content that is known to cause seizures (i.e., flashing visual content) Provide ways to help users with disabilities navigate, find content, and determine where they are
48 WCAG Guidelines - Understandable Make text content readable and understandable (limit line length of text, provide white space, avoid large chunks of italic text) Make web pages appear and operate in predictable ways (place elements in same relative order within a website) Help users avoid and correct mistakes that do occur (i.e., entering data into a form color coded text may not be enough maybe sound or highlighted text)
49 WCAG Guidelines - Robust Maximize compatibility with current and future user agents, including assistive technologies (use standards-compliant markup and validated code) Consider providing alternative methods of content presentation to accommodate a variety of users (i.e., text-only alternative to be used with screen readers)
50 Design for the Screen The computer display is very different from print-based media The display is landscape-oriented Colors and contrasts are different Computer displays are low-resolution devices Reformat paper documents for online display
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52 Reformat Content for Online Presentation It is a poor choice to take documents that are formatted for print and post them online A document that is perfectly legible on paper is hard to negotiate online
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55 Design specifically for the computer medium, considering how the page layout, fonts, and colors you use appear on the screen Craft an appropriate look and feel and stick with it throughout your site Test and revise your interface by paying close attention to the demands of online display Make your design portable Summary
56 Summary (continued) Plan for easy access to your information Design a unified look for your site Strive for smooth transitions from one page to the next Create templates for your grid structure and apply them consistently Use active white space as an integral part of your design Use text, color, and object placement to guide the user’s eye
57 Summary (continued) Know your audience, and design pages that suit their needs, interests, and viewing preferences Leverage the power of hypertext linking Provide enough links for the users to create their own path through your information Design your text for online display