Datasheet
FIGURE 1.18
Interface items may be grayed out until they are needed, as menu items are grayed out here in Bryce until
the mouse moves over them.
Mouse-overs
Tools can become invisible or small when not used, but when the mouse rolls over the small or
invisible tool area, they can pop up and become large and visible and functional once again, as
shown in Figure 1.19.
FIGURE 1.19
It may be helpful for tools to become more visible when the mouse passes over them. Here in Bryce, a
light glows when the mouse passes over the light.
Memory dots
Offering the user a quick means of switching from one window to another can definitely be a use-
ful addition to the application. For example, the Windows Task Bar shows the applications that are
open and allows the user to click on any one of them to quickly go back and forth. This feature,
however, does not need to take a large portion of your application. It can be implemented via small
buttons or even small dots. For example, buttons could switch you from one window to another
within an application.
You may provide several memory dots in your interface design, which when pressed by default take
the user to the main screen of your application. From there, whenever the user wants to go to another
part of the program, while remembering where he was, he can click another memory dot and start
from the main application page again. The original memory dot remembers where the user left off.
Transparencies and shadows
You can give your user interface a 3D look by adding shadows. The magnifying glass in Figure 1.17
casts a shadow, which gives it a floating appearance. Shadows create two effects on the user. First,
they may subconsciously give the user the clue that the objects are draggable so that the user
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Designing Next-Generation User Experiences
Part I
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