Awesome example.. thats exactly what I'm looking for.
Cheers,
Chris Wright
07843258503
http://chrismwright.com/
On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 4:29 PM, Matthew Ventre wrote:
> An in-the-wild example I could point to would be something along the
> lines of what Nintendo does with their Club Nintendo
Yup its basically a single screen wizard.
I realise the importance of showing the user how many steps, but don't have
a clear way of doing that vertically just yet...
thanks for the other tips, very useful..
Cheers,
Chris Wright
07843258503
http://chrismwright.com/
On Wed, May 13, 2009 at 6:
Hey Chris,
Not sure if this will help but it's a flow I designed a few years ago
that uses a slide approach.
http://troyworks.com/blog/case-study-rich-user-forms-the-slide-user-registration/
for your eyes only. use I x D with no spaces to get in.
The client liked it. But opted to go with anot
The old Macromedia site had an accordion-style UI for the shopping
checkout process. It used Flash.
Adobe (acquired Macromedia) now also has a very similar UI in their
store.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Posted from the new ixda.org
http://www.ixda.org/dis
I was thinking of something like this myself. No files to show just
yet but will upload the demo later.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Posted from the new ixda.org
http://www.ixda.org/discuss?post=41982
___
I'm in the creating a credit card application that divides the
information up over the number of screens. When researching
approaches, I came across this AmericanExpress Platinum Card example
which takes an accordian in-page approach to filling in the form.
https://www201.americanexpress.com/inga
An in-the-wild example I could point to would be something along the
lines of what Nintendo does with their Club Nintendo signup form.
https://club.nintendo.com/registration.do
Like Robert said, inline validation a must, keep it as simple as
possible, and don't break the user's expectations.
In
>
> I'm designing a simple registration process, four steps, each a small
>> form.
>> I want to create one page, with each step appearing below the other.. so
>> the
>> process sort of 'slides down' one page.
>
>
It sounds like all you're doing is creating a single-screen version of a
wizard. Some
On 13 May 2009, at 16:46, Chris Wright wrote:
[snip]
Does anyone have any examples of good implications of such systems,
research
supporting, or general thoughts?
I've yet to see an example of this sort of thing that I like. They all
seem to require extra clicks to switch between the steps
I'm designing a simple registration process, four steps, each a small form.
I want to create one page, with each step appearing below the other.. so the
process sort of 'slides down' one page. The final thing will then be about
two screens (1024) deep.
This is in contract to:
1) A single screen -
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