this post was submitted on 24 Jul 2022
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Technology

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Why is it not common UX practice to start ignoring user input prior to rearranging the UI, and only responding to user input once the layout has settled and perhaps after a short delay?

It's very frustrating to reach for an option in a list, only to have the list repopulate just as I tap, inevitably on an undesired option

I'm not even talking solely about web design: even the Google Cast destination picker does this and it's native Android code

Has Apple solved this over in iOS land?

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[–] sergih123@eslemmy.es 3 points 1 year ago

This is so true, I specially hate it when it's due to he cookies pop-up, I'm about to click omethign and then the pop-up shifts the whole website up/down, and end up clicking in some random thing.

When it happens twice in a row I feel stupid too.

[–] seafoam_green@sh.itjust.works 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

Tbh I think a lot of developers either don't know that they need to fix this or don't know how to fix this. They get a mock-up from the designer and implement what they see, and their implementation work is reviewed be other engineers and product people, but less often (IME) by UX. Sometimes there's no one to push for fixing these kind of things, especially when the developers don't use the software they make in their own day-to-day lives.

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