[Usability] Re: Menu order.



usability-request gnome org wrote:

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Message: 1
Date: Mon, 09 Aug 2004 18:33:26 +0200
From: Christian Neumair <chris gnome-de org>
Subject: Re: [Usability] Menu order
To: markus hammer <hm sabotage at>
Cc: Gnome UI <usability gnome org>
Message-ID: <1092069206 9838 10 camel widget>
Content-Type: text/plain

Am Sonntag, den 08.08.2004, 20:04 +0200 schrieb markus hammer:

Am Son, den 08.08.2004 um 19:33 Uhr +0200 schrieb Samuel Abels:

On Fri, 2004-08-06 at 02:49, Christoffer Olsen wrote:

I usually run my Gnome in English, but today I ran it in Norwegian. All
of a sudden, I noticed that my GNOME menu was reordered - alphabetized,
that is. It is alphabetized in English too, thus Accessories is on top,
and not at the bottom, as it is now. I got confused by this until I
understood what happened, and then I got atuned to it.

Yes, I would love to see a better solution either. I am using a german
menu at work and an english language menu at home and this confuses me
all the time.

The only alternative solution would be a fixed order (right?), but I
would still prefer that. Isn't it better to sort the list by semantics
then by syntax anyway?

i encountered this too. its utterly unlogical, dont know if i ever filed
a bug report though. a good example - the german gnome menu has desktop
settings as second entry. it should be consistent across different locales, so i would vote for a
semantic list as well.


The problem is that having them not sorted alphabetically may confuse
users who don't know that our order was intentional. Maybe we've to
figure out what order fits our needs best. We've got to consider what
applications most people use before deciding how we sort it. Another
solution would be to add a gconf keys containing a list of preferred
application menu entries that (if they exist) should be shown in that
order before the rest is appended afterwards. Of course, the most
intuitive order has to be the default.
Proposed order that springs to mind:

Desktop Preferences
Office
Internet
Multimedia
Graphics
Development
Games
Accessoires
System Tools
Other
[Rest]

I'll look into implementing it for GNOME 2.10 :).

regs,
 Chris



------------------------------

Message: 2
Date: Mon, 09 Aug 2004 21:15:50 +0200
From: Christian Neumair <chris gnome-de org>
Subject: Re: [Usability] Menu order
To: markus hammer <hm sabotage at>
Cc: Gnome UI <usability gnome org>
Message-ID: <1092078951 4167 4 camel widget>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

Am Montag, den 09.08.2004, 18:33 +0200 schrieb Christian Neumair:

Am Sonntag, den 08.08.2004, 20:04 +0200 schrieb markus hammer:

Am Son, den 08.08.2004 um 19:33 Uhr +0200 schrieb Samuel Abels:

On Fri, 2004-08-06 at 02:49, Christoffer Olsen wrote:

I usually run my Gnome in English, but today I ran it in Norwegian. All
of a sudden, I noticed that my GNOME menu was reordered - alphabetized,
that is. It is alphabetized in English too, thus Accessories is on top,
and not at the bottom, as it is now. I got confused by this until I
understood what happened, and then I got atuned to it.

Yes, I would love to see a better solution either. I am using a german
menu at work and an english language menu at home and this confuses me
all the time.

The only alternative solution would be a fixed order (right?), but I
would still prefer that. Isn't it better to sort the list by semantics
then by syntax anyway?

i encountered this too. its utterly unlogical, dont know if i ever filed
a bug report though. a good example - the german gnome menu has desktop
settings as second entry. it should be consistent across different locales, so i would vote for a
semantic list as well.

The problem is that having them not sorted alphabetically may confuse
users who don't know that our order was intentional. Maybe we've to
figure out what order fits our needs best. We've got to consider what
applications most people use before deciding how we sort it. Another
solution would be to add a gconf keys containing a list of preferred
application menu entries that (if they exist) should be shown in that
order before the rest is appended afterwards. Of course, the most
intuitive order has to be the default.
Proposed order that springs to mind:

Desktop Preferences
Office
Internet
Multimedia
Graphics
Development
Games
Accessoires
System Tools
Other
[Rest]

I'll look into implementing it for GNOME 2.10 :).


It was simpler than I though! The attached set of patches sets the order
according to the list above.
Note that it may break your existing folders if you modified them
because ~/.gnome2/vfolders is and will be on crack as long as we have a
new menu system.


Setting the menu order to a pre-set list across locales is an extraordinary and wide-ranging step. I think that this topic should be discussed much more rigorously before anybody applies patches to "fix" this "issue". There are very good reasons why the order should be set alphabetically in every language, for example:

- All users, regardless of their alphabet background, are trained from an early age to locate an item in a list primarily using the alphabet as a basic navigational tool. If we remove this framework, then we need to replace the alphabet with another framework that is equally powerful. Therein lies the difficulty.

- If we define a pre-set list, such as the one mentioned in this thread, what is to say that this pre-set list is universal across all locales? Even in those locales where the pre-set list is correctly ordered in descending popularity, you still require your user to hunt through the whole list every time they want to find a new menu. There are no familiar alphabetical sign-posts to navigate by.

- Any pre-set list would of necessity be a compromise. All those users who prefer seeing "Email" and "Games" at the top of the menu, and "Desktop Preferences" last on the menu, will be cheesed off by the pre-set list suggested above. I am not saying that I know of a better pre-set list, only that any pre-set list is bound to be non-intuitive to a majority of people.

- Alphabetical ordering is standard UI design practise. Users worldwide are accustomed to this approach.

I also often look at the German and Spanish versions of the GNOME desktop, for comparisons. When I change languages, I >>never<< expect to see menu items in the same place. I just follow the alphabet, and I find the menu item I am looking for.

Maybe I haven't understood the above thread properly, and what is under discussion is the following:

- Default behavior: alphabetical ordering across all locales.
- Customizable user behavior: provision of a set-list option in Desktop Preferences.

Pat





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