| Type | Book |
|---|---|
| Date | 1988 |
| Pages | 257 |
| Tags | nonfiction, interface design, 75 in 2019 |
It is important that our explanations for things be correct, not merely convincing or reassuring:
Once we have an explanation—correct or incorrect—for otherwise discrepant or puzzling events, there is no more puzzle, no more discrepancy. As a result, we are complacent, at least for a while.
On confirmation and undo:
In computer systems, it is common to prevent errors by requiring confirmation before a command will be executed, especially when the action will destroy a file. But the request is ill timed; it comes just after the person has initiated the action and is still fully content with the choice.
It would be more appropriate to eliminate irreversible actions: in this example, the request to remove a file would be handled by the computer's moving the file to some temporary holding place. Then the user would have time for reconsideration and recovery.
| Term | Location |
|---|---|
| hypertext | 212–213 |
| Name | Role |
|---|---|
| Basic Books | Publisher |
| Donald A. Norman | Author |
| Preface | vii |
| One: The Psychopathology of Everyday Thigns | 1 |
| Two: The Psychology of Everyday Actions | 34 |
| Three: Knowledge in the Head and in the World | 54 |
| Four: Knowing What to Do | 81 |
| Five: To Err Is Human | 105 |
| Six: The Design Challenge | 141 |
| Seven: User-Centered Design | 187 |
| Notes | 219 |
| Suggested Readings | 237 |
| References | 241 |
| Index | 249 |