Mixing true/false and open-ended settings

I’ve been handed a settings page to review. The settings mix true/false and open-ended items. Some of the open-ended items can be long and wordy. This is an example of the current design:
Mixing the booleans with the long-form attributes …
share this post : )
Mixing true/false and open-ended settings

I’ve been handed a settings page to review. The settings mix true/false and open-ended items. Some of the open-ended items can be long and wordy. This is an example of the current design:
Mixing the booleans with the long-form attributes …
share this post : )
Dark mode: am I inversing the lightness scale around the midpoint or sliding the scale to preserve sibling elements’ lightness relative to each other? [migrated]
![Dark mode: am I inversing the lightness scale around the midpoint or sliding the scale to preserve sibling elements' lightness relative to each other? [migrated]](https://uxsharelab.com/wp-content/themes/proxima/images/thumbnail-placeholder.gif)
For context, I’m using Tailwind CSS which has a lightness scale for its colors of 100-900, with 100 being the lightest and 900 being the darkest.
I also designed my app for dark mode first.
Let’s take the sidebar and main content area as a…
share this post : )
Is it good practice to allow users to navigate simply by hovering on a menu item without clicking?

A pattern I have noticed recently on some (desktop) websites is that users can navigate simply by hovering on menu items.
While this is more efficient (fewer clicks) it feels unexpected and therefore unintuitive to me. I am wondering if it…
share this post : )
Accessibility and Inclusivity: Distinctions in Experience Design

The web is for everyone. When it is well designed. When it isn’t, it is a barrier. Creating frustration, denying access, failing to represent individuals, and disenfranchising groups. When designers and developers are successful, the web realizes its potential: working for all people. Accessible. Usable. Inclusive. But what does this actually mean for UX teams who have the power—and responsibility—to make it happen?
share this post : )
Accessibility and Inclusivity: Distinctions in Experience Design

The web is for everyone. When it is well designed. When it isn’t, it is a barrier. Creating frustration, denying access, failing to represent individuals, and disenfranchising groups. When designers and developers are successful, the web realizes its potential: working for all people. Accessible. Usable. Inclusive. But what does this actually mean for UX teams who have the power—and responsibility—to make it happen?
share this post : )
Design Lessons from Evolutionary Biology

What does biology have to do with UX design? Joseph Knelman reveals how Biophilic Design can create a better user experience, by aligning with our evolutionary needs.