25
FORMS A MANIFESTO Danielle Swank Jim Fleming June 2011

Forms : a UX manifesto

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Presentation @devchatt 2011. Git hub link to example code. https://github.com/FreeFlow/formless-forms

Citation preview

Page 1: Forms : a UX manifesto

FORMS A MANIFESTO

Danielle SwankJim FlemingJune 2011

Page 2: Forms : a UX manifesto

developers are lazy

Page 3: Forms : a UX manifesto
Page 4: Forms : a UX manifesto

most forms are designed fordatabases and not people

Page 5: Forms : a UX manifesto
Page 6: Forms : a UX manifesto

people can find those same formshard, scary, confusing and slow

Page 7: Forms : a UX manifesto
Page 8: Forms : a UX manifesto

there are other ways...

Page 9: Forms : a UX manifesto

the case for intelligent forms

Page 10: Forms : a UX manifesto

1. static forms

EXAMPLESlogin forms, email sign-ups

WHEN TO USEall or most of the fields are required

Page 11: Forms : a UX manifesto

example image 1 goes here

Page 12: Forms : a UX manifesto

example image 2 goes here

Page 13: Forms : a UX manifesto

2. ADAPTIVE forms

EXAMPLESproduct data, surveys, task lists

WHEN TO USEcomplex discrete data, few required fields

Page 14: Forms : a UX manifesto

example slide 5 goes here

Page 15: Forms : a UX manifesto

example slide 3 goes here

Page 16: Forms : a UX manifesto

example slide 4 goes here

Page 17: Forms : a UX manifesto

3. Formless forms

EXAMPLEScontent management systems, blogs, addresses

WHEN TO USElarge amount of simple data, standardized formats

Page 18: Forms : a UX manifesto
Page 19: Forms : a UX manifesto

demo goes here

Page 20: Forms : a UX manifesto
Page 21: Forms : a UX manifesto

there are other ways.

Page 22: Forms : a UX manifesto

people should not find formshard, scary, confusing or slow

Page 23: Forms : a UX manifesto

create forms for people not databases

Page 24: Forms : a UX manifesto

don’t be lazy

Page 25: Forms : a UX manifesto

FORMS A MANIFESTO

Danielle SwankJim FlemingJune 2011