Designing Highly Useable Software

Author: Jeff Cogswell  

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc‎

Publication year: 2006

E-ISBN: 9780470113189

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780782143010

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9780782143010

Subject: TP Automation Technology , Computer Technology;TP3 Computers

Language: ENG

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Description

Learn What Usability Really Is, Why to Strive for It, and How to Achieve It

"Highly useable" software is easy to use. It does what you expect it to. And it does it well.

It's not easy to build but as this book demonstrates, it's well worth the effort. Highly useable software is highly successful software—and everyone wins.
Inside, an accomplished programmer who has made usability his business systematically explores the world of programming, showing you how every aspect of the work is implicated in the usability of the final product. This is not just an "issues" book, however, but systematic, real-world instructions for developing applications that are better in every way. As you'll learn, there's no such thing as "intuitive" software. Instead, there are just the factors that make it highly useable: simplicity, consistency, the recognition of accepted conventions, and the foregrounding of the user's perspective. With these principles under your belt, you'll quickly discover dozens of ways to make your applications more useable:

  • Making windows and dialog boxes easy to comprehend and use
  • Designing software that is time- and resource-efficient
  • Making your software easy to navigate
  • Reducing the complexity of reports and other presentations of data
  • Understanding how the wrong programming decisions can limit usability
  • Ensuring smooth starts and stops
  • Capitalizing on the usability advantages of object-oriented programming
  • Understanding how usability affects your product's financial success
  • Using the testing process to improve usability
  • Promoting usability in training, installation, and online help
  • Making management decisions that will benefit software usability

Some chapters are written primarily for programmers, one primarily for managers. Most are for everyone, and all are filled with illuminating, usually amusing examples drawn from both inside and outside the technical world. A helpful appendix provides information on standards, usability groups, and sources for more information.

Chapter

Acknowledgments

pp.:  1 – 9

Contents at a Glance

pp.:  9 – 11

Contents

pp.:  11 – 13

Introduction

pp.:  13 – 19

Part I: Keeping It Simple

pp.:  19 – 25

Part II: The Lonely Engineer

pp.:  25 – 193

Part II: The Business of It All: It’s “Dollars and Sense”

pp.:  193 – 269

Index

pp.:  269 – 351

LastPages

pp.:  351 – 366

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