8 CSS & JavaScript Snippets for Creating Paginated Navigations
We share some highly creative CSS and JavaScript code snippets that you can use for free to improve the pagination on your own website.
The post 8 CSS & JavaScript Snippets for Creating Paginated Navigations appeared first on Speckyboy Design Magazine.
Do you get differentiated data from Google Optimize A/B test with multiple user targeting variables?
Where can a ux designer find data for a user persona or an empathy map when working on a fictional project for their portfolio?
What to Do When a Client Tries Your Patience
We take a look at some scenarios where patience between a designer and client is called for, and when it’s time to say “enough.”
The post What to Do When a Client Tries Your Patience appeared first on Speckyboy Design Magazine.
Design patterns to indicate status on infinite scroll pages
There are several questions regarding design patterns that apply to infinite scroll such as What’s the design pattern at the end of infinite scroll? and also What are best mobile navigation practices for infinite scrolling pages with a deep hierarchy?
However, my question specifically applies to design patterns that help indicate where the user is currently located within an infinite scroll section of a page, which is often simply handled by the same page scroll bar. While this is a solution to the design pattern, it exists by default and isn’t designed specifically to handle this issue.
There are also instances of two scroll bars on the same page, which causes some confusion with users, not the least of which exists on the mobile page views of having to manipulate two scroll bars in a very limited space.
Are there good examples of how infinite page scrolls are handles in a web or mobile application that provides clear indication of where the user is currently located and allows then to navigate the content?
Why We Unfairly Judge Other Designers
In design circles, we’re quick to judge others in our profession. It’s incredibly easy to glance at another’s work and call it “crap.” But are we judging fairly?
The post Why We Unfairly Judge Other Designers appeared first on Speckyboy Design Magazine.