Compare Effects
Various Colors
Campere Effécts Verieus
Colars
Cempare Efficts
Verious Celors
Compire Effêcts
Variius
Colers
Campare Effacts
Virious Calors
Compore Effëcts Variuus
Colirs
Cimpare Effocts
Vorious Cilors
Compure Effàcts Varioas
Colurs
Cumpare Effucts
Vurious Culors
Compari Effâcts Varioes
Colõrs
Comparo Effècts
Variaus Còlors
Compara Effäcts Varioos
Colòrs
To return close this window
Why button bars are useful
For the information designer hypertext links are a mixed blessing. The
radical shifts in context that links create can easily confuse Web users,
who need organized cues and interface elements if they are to follow and
understand hypertext links from one Web page to another. This is
particularly true when you want users to be able to follow (or at least
recognize) an ordered sequence of documents. Notice in the diagram above
that although the user has entered the second Web site at page 6, the site
is an ordered sequence of pages.
By augmenting the standard
Web viewer "Back" and "Forward" buttons with
"Next Page" and "Previous Page" buttons built into the
page itself the user then has interface tools to navigate through the
information in your site in the sequence you intended. Button bars can
also display location information, much the way running chapter headers do
in printed books:
|
|