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User input

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  • D Dalek Dave

    Tom Deketelaere wrote:

    no user is going to want to do this

    So don't give them the Option, enforce it upon them.

    ------------------------------------ America is the only country that went from barbarism to decadence without civilization in between. Oscar Wilde

    T Offline
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    Tom Deketelaere
    wrote on last edited by
    #10

    Yeah and see how fast they run to the competition :laugh: Would you do something like this everytime you wanted to delete a folder or file in the explorer?

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    • T Tom Deketelaere

      Yeah and see how fast they run to the competition :laugh: Would you do something like this everytime you wanted to delete a folder or file in the explorer?

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      Dalek Dave
      wrote on last edited by
      #11

      No, I would use a big piece of wood with a nail and some barbed wire and beat them into submission. Metaphorically of course. Once they had made serious errors through not reading, they will learn.

      ------------------------------------ America is the only country that went from barbarism to decadence without civilization in between. Oscar Wilde

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      • T Tom Deketelaere

        Not only input but also user laziness (don't know if that's a word) Yesterday I had one off those age old discussions with my boss. When deleting a record/file/... is it enough to just display 1 warning message (with a yes and no button, you know the one 'Are you sure you want to...'). My argument/experiance is that users don't read these anyway so you could display 10 off them the users would just click without reading and the only thing you would create is frustration. Also alternating the answers doesn't work after a couple times the user knows them out off his head. So my boss suggested the following for fun(wich could work but is even more frustating). Force the user to enter the text 'read and approved' and the message displayed. And only if that matches enable the Yes or No buttons. Thought it was funny and clever (but as I said in the 'real' world no user is going to want to do this so...) [EDIT]correct typo thanks to Steve_Harris and Dalek Dave :) [/EDIT]

        modified on Tuesday, December 16, 2008 8:11 AM

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        Ray Cassick
        wrote on last edited by
        #12

        Outlook does something like this when an application tries to send email on your behalf... it pops up a dialog box that has a timer on it that delays your ability to dismiss it using the OK\cancel button for 10 seconds. I guess they assume that since you are bored you will read it.


        FFRF[^]
        My LinkedIn profile[^]
        My Programmers Blog[^]

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        • H hairy_hats

          Hey Tom, I've got a useful add-on to FF called a spell checker, which underlines in red words like lazyness...I can send you a link if you're interested... ;P

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          Tom Deketelaere
          wrote on last edited by
          #13

          Don't use FF here, I use chrome (yeah really I do :) ) and that one has it too only one small 'bug' every word (or olmost every word) is underlined like that so...

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          • R Ray Cassick

            Outlook does something like this when an application tries to send email on your behalf... it pops up a dialog box that has a timer on it that delays your ability to dismiss it using the OK\cancel button for 10 seconds. I guess they assume that since you are bored you will read it.


            FFRF[^]
            My LinkedIn profile[^]
            My Programmers Blog[^]

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            Tom Deketelaere
            wrote on last edited by
            #14

            Yeah but it's still no garentee, the user that knows this might just go and do something else while waiting for the button to enable. At least that's what I do :p

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            • D Dalek Dave

              No, I would use a big piece of wood with a nail and some barbed wire and beat them into submission. Metaphorically of course. Once they had made serious errors through not reading, they will learn.

              ------------------------------------ America is the only country that went from barbarism to decadence without civilization in between. Oscar Wilde

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              Tom Deketelaere
              wrote on last edited by
              #15

              Dalek Dave wrote:

              No, I would use a big piece of wood with a nail and some barbed wire and beat them into submission.

              :laugh:

              Dalek Dave wrote:

              Metaphorically of course.

              I actually have a friend who did this after getting his new laptop with vista on it (in the very urly stages of vista). He got so frustrated off all the 'Are you sure' messages, he started beating on the thing

              Dalek Dave wrote:

              Once they had made serious errors through not reading, they will learn.

              Actually they don't they expect us to magicly recover what they removed. :sigh:

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              • T Tom Deketelaere

                Yeah and see how fast they run to the competition :laugh: Would you do something like this everytime you wanted to delete a folder or file in the explorer?

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                PIEBALDconsult
                wrote on last edited by
                #16

                The invented the recycle bin for such people. I turn mine off.

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                • P PIEBALDconsult

                  The invented the recycle bin for such people. I turn mine off.

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                  Tom Deketelaere
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #17

                  Yeah that works for the explorer and for the ones that don't know off shift delete. But what about a database (yeah I know backup's but still)

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                  • T Tom Deketelaere

                    Don't use FF here, I use chrome (yeah really I do :) ) and that one has it too only one small 'bug' every word (or olmost every word) is underlined like that so...

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                    H Offline
                    hairy_hats
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #18

                    Tom Deketelaere wrote:

                    it too only one small 'bug' every word (or olmost every word) is underlined like that so

                    Are you sure the bug isn't in your spelling? :D Maybe you need to change the dictionary?

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                    • T Tom Deketelaere

                      Not only input but also user laziness (don't know if that's a word) Yesterday I had one off those age old discussions with my boss. When deleting a record/file/... is it enough to just display 1 warning message (with a yes and no button, you know the one 'Are you sure you want to...'). My argument/experiance is that users don't read these anyway so you could display 10 off them the users would just click without reading and the only thing you would create is frustration. Also alternating the answers doesn't work after a couple times the user knows them out off his head. So my boss suggested the following for fun(wich could work but is even more frustating). Force the user to enter the text 'read and approved' and the message displayed. And only if that matches enable the Yes or No buttons. Thought it was funny and clever (but as I said in the 'real' world no user is going to want to do this so...) [EDIT]correct typo thanks to Steve_Harris and Dalek Dave :) [/EDIT]

                      modified on Tuesday, December 16, 2008 8:11 AM

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                      StewBob
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #19

                      To provide a dialog box is human. To provide Undo capability, divine.

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                      • H hairy_hats

                        Tom Deketelaere wrote:

                        it too only one small 'bug' every word (or olmost every word) is underlined like that so

                        Are you sure the bug isn't in your spelling? :D Maybe you need to change the dictionary?

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                        Tom Deketelaere
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #20

                        :-O my mistake was still standing on dutch So this is the first test to see how my spelling is :) So far no red lines :-D

                        1 Reply Last reply
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                        • T Tom Deketelaere

                          Not only input but also user laziness (don't know if that's a word) Yesterday I had one off those age old discussions with my boss. When deleting a record/file/... is it enough to just display 1 warning message (with a yes and no button, you know the one 'Are you sure you want to...'). My argument/experiance is that users don't read these anyway so you could display 10 off them the users would just click without reading and the only thing you would create is frustration. Also alternating the answers doesn't work after a couple times the user knows them out off his head. So my boss suggested the following for fun(wich could work but is even more frustating). Force the user to enter the text 'read and approved' and the message displayed. And only if that matches enable the Yes or No buttons. Thought it was funny and clever (but as I said in the 'real' world no user is going to want to do this so...) [EDIT]correct typo thanks to Steve_Harris and Dalek Dave :) [/EDIT]

                          modified on Tuesday, December 16, 2008 8:11 AM

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                          R Offline
                          Russell Jones
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #21

                          With my own machines I turn off all options that pester me like this and I no longer have any accidental deletions. While you know you can get stuff back from the waste basket or you'll be warned that what you are doing is stupid you don't concentrate on what you are doing and problems occur. I like to think of the guy in DiceMan who recommends that all cars should have a spike in the centre of the steering wheel and there'd be many fewer accidents. Unfortunately you'd end up with a bunch of lying whingebags if you unleashed this on a proper system complaining about how the system had miraculously stolen their data. You'd therefore need to replace the yes no dialogs with a screen capture app so that you could prove to them that it was their actions that was about to result in their dismissal and not a system failure ;-) Russ

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                          • T Tom Deketelaere

                            Not only input but also user laziness (don't know if that's a word) Yesterday I had one off those age old discussions with my boss. When deleting a record/file/... is it enough to just display 1 warning message (with a yes and no button, you know the one 'Are you sure you want to...'). My argument/experiance is that users don't read these anyway so you could display 10 off them the users would just click without reading and the only thing you would create is frustration. Also alternating the answers doesn't work after a couple times the user knows them out off his head. So my boss suggested the following for fun(wich could work but is even more frustating). Force the user to enter the text 'read and approved' and the message displayed. And only if that matches enable the Yes or No buttons. Thought it was funny and clever (but as I said in the 'real' world no user is going to want to do this so...) [EDIT]correct typo thanks to Steve_Harris and Dalek Dave :) [/EDIT]

                            modified on Tuesday, December 16, 2008 8:11 AM

                            J Offline
                            J Offline
                            John M Drescher
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #22

                            Tom Deketelaere wrote:

                            is it enough to just display 1 warning message (with a yes and no button, you know the one 'Are you sure you want to...').

                            I believe the problem here is that we as users are hit with too many of these types of questions so that by now we just pretty much ignore them and click them away as fast as they appear. Every day when I am coding and I am presented with the dialog that says basically your executable did not build would you like to debug it anyways I just laugh. Sometimes I hit yes and expect Microsoft to fix my code for me and have a real working executable that I can debug...

                            John

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                            • J John M Drescher

                              Tom Deketelaere wrote:

                              is it enough to just display 1 warning message (with a yes and no button, you know the one 'Are you sure you want to...').

                              I believe the problem here is that we as users are hit with too many of these types of questions so that by now we just pretty much ignore them and click them away as fast as they appear. Every day when I am coding and I am presented with the dialog that says basically your executable did not build would you like to debug it anyways I just laugh. Sometimes I hit yes and expect Microsoft to fix my code for me and have a real working executable that I can debug...

                              John

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                              Dan Neely
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #23

                              That's actually useful if your boss comes by to see what you've done lately and your most recently entered code doesn't work. :rolleyes:

                              Today's lesson is brought to you by the word "niggardly". Remember kids, don't attribute to racism what can be explained by Scandinavian language roots. -- Robert Royall

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                              • T Tom Deketelaere

                                Not only input but also user laziness (don't know if that's a word) Yesterday I had one off those age old discussions with my boss. When deleting a record/file/... is it enough to just display 1 warning message (with a yes and no button, you know the one 'Are you sure you want to...'). My argument/experiance is that users don't read these anyway so you could display 10 off them the users would just click without reading and the only thing you would create is frustration. Also alternating the answers doesn't work after a couple times the user knows them out off his head. So my boss suggested the following for fun(wich could work but is even more frustating). Force the user to enter the text 'read and approved' and the message displayed. And only if that matches enable the Yes or No buttons. Thought it was funny and clever (but as I said in the 'real' world no user is going to want to do this so...) [EDIT]correct typo thanks to Steve_Harris and Dalek Dave :) [/EDIT]

                                modified on Tuesday, December 16, 2008 8:11 AM

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                                0x3c0
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #24

                                Why bother? Eventually they're just going to copy and paste the text into the text box

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                                • 0 0x3c0

                                  Why bother? Eventually they're just going to copy and paste the text into the text box

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                                  Tom Deketelaere
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #25

                                  The text displayed in a messagebox isn't selectable and therefor they can't copy paste it. I guess they could have a text file and copy past it from there but I doubt users would go so far. But like I said in the 'real' world it wouldn't work anyway, the user would get frustrated with it to fast and switch to an alternate program.

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                                  • D Dan Neely

                                    That's actually useful if your boss comes by to see what you've done lately and your most recently entered code doesn't work. :rolleyes:

                                    Today's lesson is brought to you by the word "niggardly". Remember kids, don't attribute to racism what can be explained by Scandinavian language roots. -- Robert Royall

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                                    J Offline
                                    John M Drescher
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #26

                                    Ahh. In that case I would either pull the last version from the cvs into a new sandbox or ask him to come back later. After 12 years of dealing with me he will mostly be expecting the latter...

                                    John

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                                    • T Tom Deketelaere

                                      The text displayed in a messagebox isn't selectable and therefor they can't copy paste it. I guess they could have a text file and copy past it from there but I doubt users would go so far. But like I said in the 'real' world it wouldn't work anyway, the user would get frustrated with it to fast and switch to an alternate program.

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                                      R Offline
                                      Roger Wright
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #27

                                      Tom Deketelaere wrote:

                                      they could have a text file and copy past it from there but I doubt users would go so far.

                                      Why not? I usually have to do that with my posts to CP, since a post fails almost as often as succeeds.

                                      "A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"

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                                      • R Roger Wright

                                        Tom Deketelaere wrote:

                                        they could have a text file and copy past it from there but I doubt users would go so far.

                                        Why not? I usually have to do that with my posts to CP, since a post fails almost as often as succeeds.

                                        "A Journey of a Thousand Rest Stops Begins with a Single Movement"

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                                        Tom Deketelaere
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #28

                                        They would have to have every message (that uses this) in a text file somewhere saved on their hard disk. So when a message like this pops up they would have to navigate to that file, open that file, search for the appropriate text , copy and paste it. Now I'm not talking about large text's here just one line. So it would be faster to just type it. Example from a message: Are you sure you want to delete file 'insert name from file'? This takes about 10 sec to type. Finding that text file,opening it, searching for the right text, copy - paste it would take a lot longer

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                                        • T Tom Deketelaere

                                          Dalek Dave wrote:

                                          No, I would use a big piece of wood with a nail and some barbed wire and beat them into submission.

                                          :laugh:

                                          Dalek Dave wrote:

                                          Metaphorically of course.

                                          I actually have a friend who did this after getting his new laptop with vista on it (in the very urly stages of vista). He got so frustrated off all the 'Are you sure' messages, he started beating on the thing

                                          Dalek Dave wrote:

                                          Once they had made serious errors through not reading, they will learn.

                                          Actually they don't they expect us to magicly recover what they removed. :sigh:

                                          H Offline
                                          H Offline
                                          Henry Minute
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #29

                                          Tom Deketelaere wrote:

                                          he started beating on the thing

                                          You should introduce him to this[^] before he gets near your computer.

                                          Henry Minute honi soit qui mal y pongs - evil to he who thinks it stinks

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