Best examples of sites that guide users through longer forms, especially with hierarchy? [closed]
![Best examples of sites that guide users through longer forms, especially with hierarchy? [closed]](https://uxsharelab.com/wp-content/themes/proxima/images/thumbnail-placeholder.gif)
I’m wondering if anyone has any examples of a website you really like that does a great job at guiding a user through a form with different types of input fields, ideally without clicking out of the window.
I’m the only designer on my team…
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Why are so many websites these days obsessed with having huge sticky sections at the top

For example this page
https://uk.indeed.com/viewjob?cmp=Hexagon-Recruitment&t=Refuse+Collector&jk=99dc36532252951a&q=bin+man&vjs=3
About a third of the screen is taken up by an incredibly irritating sticky section. I have a…
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30 Free Responsive Newsletter Templates for Your Marketing Campaigns in 2025

Boost your marketing campaigns with our free, easy-to-edit, and responsive newsletter templates that work across all devices and email clients.
The post 30 Free Responsive Newsletter Templates for Your Marketing Campaigns in 2025 appeared first on Speckyboy Design Magazine.
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Communicating the price on a single service, single price website

Having a pricing page or section that follows conventional pricing table design patterns seems to be a best practice for websites offering different services.
If a website offers only a single service for a single price, there is no need t…
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Why in some Dribble UI’s User Avatar (user settings) are kept in bottom left?

Just curious, I saw in some of the dribble shots are designed with the User Avatar in the bottom left of the screens and also noticed on BitBucket UI.
Is there any usability factor for keeping it at Bottom Left?
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Is it better/less confusing to show the user a longer list of options with some disabled, or only show the available choices?

This is regarding a signup/scheduling request form:
In my business (appliance repairs), there are multiple manufacturers and products:
- Refrigerators
- Washers
- Dryers
- Microwaves
- Stoves
We don’t work on all products for all manufacturers, so if someone picks “Samsung” for example, the list would be:
- Washers
- Dryers
- Microwaves
- Stoves
because we don’t work on Samsung Refrigerators. If someone picks “Viking” the list would be:
- Microwaves
- Stoves
Because viking doesn’t make washers and dryers and we don’t work on built-in refrigerators.
I’m on the fence whether to show the entire list (about a dozen items) and draw a line though and disable the unavailable choices, or to simply not show the unavailable choices.
This: Don’t hide or disable menu items? seems even more confusing than the other two options since it suggests giving an explanation as to “why?”.
Customers don’t really care why we don’t work on Samsung refrigerators, all that matters is that we don’t work on them.
Hiding the unavailable options seems like it would be a little confusing for the user because we fix refrigerators and they have a broken Samsung refrigerator, but showing the option and making it unavailable seems worse.
Does anybody have any ideas? Anything better?
Thanks!
Terry
Update:
I did some user testing and they all like
- Fewer options that are all valid
instead of
- All options with the impossible options disabled
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How to show that a form has been dirtied (edited) using a Material design?

I have a vertical list of expansion panels. Each panel has a form under it. I would like to know the best style for showing that the form has been dirtied (edited) on the expansion panel title. The goal is to allow the user to know at a gl…
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Weekly News for Designers № 619

This week’s Designer News – № 619 – includes Free Guide to Web Animation, CSS Handwritten Cheat Sheets, Pearl UI Framework, and so much more.
The post Weekly News for Designers № 619 appeared first on Speckyboy Design Magazine.
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Are there any user personas for sites like Stack Exchange? [migrated]
![Are there any user personas for sites like Stack Exchange? [migrated]](https://uxsharelab.com/wp-content/themes/proxima/images/thumbnail-placeholder.gif)
In Game Industry we have the Bartle taxonomy of player types. A way to classify users in 4 main categories. Achievers, Explorers, Socialisers and Killers. I was looking recently if there is something similar on websites like StackExchange …
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Best practices for mobile app registration and login

In terms of both registration login technology and user work flow, is there anything unfeasible or unwise with this registration configuration for a mobile app?
Phone or email
Password
Or use one-time passcode
Sign in with Facebook
Sign in…