Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

Advanced Link Checks
You should be able to find several indispensable facts about SEO in the following paragraphs. If there's at least one fact you didn't know before, imagine the difference it might make. View the source of each and every page: is there...

FrontPage: Easy Pages
One way to create web pages from scratch without using HTML is to use an editor that hides the HTML from you, letting you edit a web page as easily as you would use a word processor. These programs are called WYSIWYG (What You See is What You...

Validating Form Input in JavaScript
This time we'll make a form that collects information about the visitor at your site. You must have filled-in copious registration forms or survey forms where you had to enter your name, your email, your address, etc. Sometimes users, intentionally...

What Visitors Like and Dislike (revised)
Here's what Internet users and buyers say they like and dislike. What Internet visitors like: * They like pictures without sacrificing speed. A slow web site will cost you sales. Don't make visitors wait for graphics they're not...

Why You Should Use Turnkey Websites To Jumpstart Your Ecommerce Activity
Most people looking to do business online have heard of turnkey websites. They seem to be a one stop solution to getting an online business going without all the usual hassles associated with an online startup. Take a look thought the business &...

 
Hints All the Way

One of the best ways to make your site easier to use is to provide hints to your visitors everywhere you can. You might think that sounds simple enough, but the amount of time required to do it and the number of things to consider puts a lot of web designers off.

Visitors Don't Know Your Site

You have to consider that the overwhelming majority of your site's visitors are likely to be visiting for the first time - some of them may be loyal visitors, coming back over and over again, but the modern web lends itself more to being dipped in and out of using search engines and links from other sites. If there's some kind of process visitors need to go through to accomplish something on your site, you can't assume that they have any familiarity with it at all.

For this reason, it's important to scatter hints across your site. Whenever there's something that could seem mysterious if you hadn't used it before, hints should either appear automatically or be easily accessible, in case the user needs to know what to do.

Question Mark Icons

One of the easiest ways of doing this is to put question mark icons next to things that you think might be confusing. For example, at a website that lets people pay their water bill, I saw this:

Register for Online Billing First name: ____ Last name: ____ Account no.: ____ [?]

Notice the question mark next to the input box for account number - this was provided because, of course, not every customer is likely to know their account number by heart, or where to find it. Clicking the question mark popped up an image of a paper water bill, with an arrow pointing to where the account number could be found. Unless you want customers to wonder 'what account number?', that's the best way of doing things.

Alt Text

Alt text is the contents of your images' alt tags - that is, text you put in your image tags' alt properties, like this:

alt text here

The main purpose of this text is to provide an alternative form of display for browsers that don't support images, and blind users. However, it also has another purpose: as 'tooltips', to provide hints. If you have a small icon of a printer, for example, and clicking it causes the current article to change to its print CSS and then print, then you make make the alt text look like this:

print this article

Now, when users hover over the printer icon, the text "print this article" will appear as a tooltip - that is, black text in a yellow rectangle. This is useful for letting users know what will happen when they click parts of your site, without having to have text next to everything - especially good if you're limited for space, or you expect lots of people to use your site from mobile devices like phone and PDA browsers.

Javascript

Finally, one of the best ways to make your hints context-sensitive is to use Javascript. Not only can you enhance the alt text boxes to look nicer with Javascript, but you can also display hints entirely automatically. For example, you might have a form that asks for someone's state and date of birth:

State: _____ Date of Birth: _____

Using Javascript's onfocus event, you can easily write a little code to not only highlight the box the visitor is currently typing into, but also provide a hint next to it - so when I'm typing my state, the hint can say 'two letters is fine - just CA or NY', and when I'm typing my date of birth the hint says 'dd/mm/yyyy'.

What does this approach achieve? Well, it lets you provide hints when they're needed, without having to clutter the page with them or put them in small, faded text that makes them hard to see. Making your site sensitive to context when it comes to helping the user get things done is one of the big keys to better usability.

About the author:



Original Source: Eclipse-Articles.com - Serving over 25,000 Articles.



Information supplied and written by Lee Asher of Eclipse Domain Services

Domain Names, Hosting, Traffic and Email Solutions.