Shmuel Wolfson wrote: > I would use Press (not Push) when the user has to physically press a > button (like an ATM machine), Click when the user has to perform a mouse > click, and Tap when the user has to tap with a stylus. > > -- > Regards, > Shmuel Wolfson > Technical Writer > 052-763-7133 > > > Garnier Garnier wrote: > > Hi > > > > I have a query: > > > > Which is technically accurate, Push the Browse button to activate the > browser on click the Browse button to activate the browser? > > > > B/R > > Garnier
Agreed, except that you press _keys_ (whether on a keyboard or, like an ATM or phone, a keypad). Push is what you do to elevator buttons, doorbells, doors, and cars with dead batteries. But other issues are at least as important as which word is technically correct. Who is your audience? Are they complete computer novices? Is there really a Browse button? (That's not a UI element I'm familiar with -- I start browsers using shortcuts, the taskbar, or the Start menu.) Don't get distracted by the references to keyboard shortcuts, different mouse buttons, etc. Mention the latter only if this is for absolute beginners, who have to be told how to work a mouse. Don't mention the former (or any other alternate ways to accomplish the task) at all. If the audience needs to be told _how_ to start the browser, tell them only the one simplest, most direct way -- click Browse. For anyone other than computer novices, I'd use a variant of Art's suggestion: Start (not activate) your browser. Or better yet: Point your browser to... Don't insult their intelligence -- just tell them what to do and assume they know how (they prefer) to do it. Richard Richard G. Combs Senior Technical Writer Polycom, Inc. richardDOTcombs AT polycomDOTcom 303-223-5111 ------ rgcombs AT gmailDOTcom 303-777-0436 ------