| bio | website | |
|---|---|---|
| location | ||
| age | ||
| visits | member for | 1 year |
| seen | May 31 at 14:55 | |
| stats | profile views | 3 |
|
May 31 |
comment |
What is the expected timeframe of a double click? How could there not be any defaults? Practically every single OS ever that supported double-click will have had a default value, as opposed to requiring the user to set a value during install, no? |
|
Oct 15 |
comment |
Does the use of a WYSIWYG editor by itself improve the UX? @Lisa, sorry for the delay. While your answer is well written indeed, I don't feel that is really answers my question. I feel like you've only read the title. I completely agree with your point, and Victor's, that a creative person should have the most immediate feedback possible, but for the creative user I'm talking about (a writer), I just don't see how html/css/etc is relevant. That's expressing a completely different kind of creativity than the one I'm thinking about. |
|
Oct 15 |
awarded | Nice Question |
|
Aug 17 |
awarded | Supporter |
|
Jun 21 |
awarded | Student |
|
Jun 21 |
comment |
Does the use of a WYSIWYG editor by itself improve the UX? What I want to do, is present them with a form inside the CMS, with one field for each type of data. Upload images to one field, write text in a second, link to a youtube video in a third. Does that answer your question? |
|
Jun 21 |
comment |
Does the use of a WYSIWYG editor by itself improve the UX? Thank you JonW, much obliged :) If it makes a difference, I'm interested in medium to large scale sites, from thousands and up, pieces of content. |
|
Jun 21 |
asked | Does the use of a WYSIWYG editor by itself improve the UX? |