On this basis should I not touch the order on the preferences form...? On 28 Aug 2014 18:01, "Jared Zimmerman" jared.zimmerman@wikimedia.org wrote:
Steven I totally agree, I have a meeting with James/Editing team to talk about instrumentation of the WTE which we'll need to move forward with a good comparison here. I would say that we only need to prove that it is not disruptive, rather than measurably better. Do you feel like we'll need to do quantitative tests on every button group or just some key forms like edit, account creation, and maybe one or two others?
*Jared Zimmerman * \ Director of User Experience \ Wikimedia Foundation M +1 415 609 4043 \ @jaredzimmerman http://loo.ms/g0
On Thu, Aug 28, 2014 at 5:40 PM, Steven Walling swalling@wikimedia.org wrote:
On Thu, Aug 28, 2014 at 4:53 PM, Jared Zimmerman < jared.zimmerman@wikimedia.org> wrote:
- yes, the "primary action" will be rightmost, this could mean
progressive, in the case of a multi-step form form, destructive in the case of process where the primary function is to delete something and constructive in the case of the final step in a single or multi-step process that creates something or finalizes a non destructive process.
- they should be ordered from right to left in order of importance and
frequency of use, there should only be one primary action. secondary actions should have neutral or quiet appearance.
We will capture as many patterns and best practices in the mediawiki.ui living style guide as possible, however they will be a guide and set of best practices, and there will likely be exceptions, and places where the patterns break down.
Without completely redesigning the bottom of the wikitext editor, the minimal mediawiki.ui version of the WTE bottom could go from
[ Save Page ] [ Show Preview ] [ Show Changes ] Cancel
to…
*Cancel/Discard* (mw.destructive.quiet) *Show changes* (mw.progressive.quiet) *Preview* (mw.progressive.quiet) *[ Save ]* (mw.constructive.normal)
Whether we change to follow this pattern needs to validated with users before we attempt to standardize on it. If we're going to completely flip the order of our actions on forms then we need to demonstrate that it's worth it.
-- Steven Walling, Product Manager https://wikimediafoundation.org/
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