No offense taken, this version I had not actually tested on Safari or IE, I'll be checking that soon, sorry for that. Also, I had mistakenly left the labels on the outside, labels inside are the default option. I know its confusing when the labels are inside but I haven't thought about of a clear way of doing that, maybe placing the labels over the handler. Currently, if you can see the text "Yes" which you can change on the options, it means it is currenlty checked.
Let me know what you think, I have just updated it. On Aug 7, 3:44 am, Sanford Whiteman <[email protected]> wrote: > > Being able to see the YES means its enabled... > > I think that's it, too... but certain my users would be screaming if I > ever rolled out something this (relatively) impenetrable. It's > well-implemented, don't get me wrong -- smooth and all that -- but I > don't know what modern-world widget it's supposed to be emulating. An > old toaster switch from the tenement days? Or one of those handheld > scrambled-picture puzzles (not a comforting analogy in a UI)? > > No offense! > > -- Sandy > > P.S. Maybe what it might fit for as is a "blind toggle" when the names > are not literally Yes/No. Like when the default is "Englebert" and the > user might not know that "Not Englebert" == "Beeblebrot", they just > know they want "Not Englebert". So if you can only show one, you show > the more familiar of the two (assuming that is also the default).
