| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | Madrid, Spain | |
| age | 44 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 4 months |
| seen | Feb 19 at 10:06 | |
| stats | profile views | 16 |
Currently working as UX Expert at Nurun Madrid.
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Jan 17 |
awarded | Yearling |
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Jan 4 |
awarded | Good Answer |
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Nov 23 |
accepted | Is “user experience” evil? |
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Nov 23 |
answered | Are there any conventions for mobile behavior when swiping left/right? |
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Nov 23 |
awarded | Scholar |
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Nov 23 |
accepted | Best way to present an already filled form |
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Nov 23 |
comment |
Best way to present an already filled form Thank you for your answers. After thinking this through: editable, filled fields are best for low number of fields and high chance of being actually edited. Non editable that becomes editable on click is best for readability, big number of fields, and low probability of changes. The control to make them editable is another thing. It can be explicit or more like a "hint". I hate the clutter of an "edit" button next to each field, so I prefer the "hint" way. If there are groups of fields, it is easier because you only need a control for each block. |
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Nov 20 |
asked | Best way to present an already filled form |
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Apr 15 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Apr 5 |
awarded | Teacher |
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Apr 5 |
awarded | Student |
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Apr 5 |
awarded | Nice Question |
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Apr 5 |
awarded | Nice Answer |
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Jul 26 |
answered | What are the differences between buttons and links? |
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Jul 22 |
answered | Advanced books on UX |
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Jul 22 |
answered | Examples of placebos in UI design? |
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Jul 22 |
answered | If people don't know what they like, how do we make things that they will like? |
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Jul 19 |
asked | Is “user experience” evil? |