Identifying links without underlining them

Subject: Identifying links without underlining them
From: Lyda Woods <lyda -at- trapezo -dot- com>
To: "TECHWR-L" <techwr-l -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com>
Date: Mon, 2 Apr 2001 10:21:09 -0700 (PDT)


<snip>
About the only thing that underlining does well is obscure
the text above it.
</snip>

Bruce has an excellent point backed up by my experienc in Human Factors
test situations where participants could not read the URL clearly because
of underlining and mis-typed it into their browsers. (They were reading
off a hard copy document). We subsequently removed all underlining from
our links. This looked a bit weird however, because underlining has
become the informal signal that "this is the link". I was able to
color-code the links instead. What standards do others use for indicating
links in hard copy docs in lieu of underlining?

Lyda



^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

*** Deva(tm) Tools for Dreamweaver and Deva(tm) Search ***
Build Contents, Indexes, and Search for Web Sites and Help Systems
Available 4/30/01 at http://www.devahelp.com or info -at- devahelp -dot- com

Sponsored by DigiPub Solutions Corp, producers of PDF 2001
Conference East, June 4-5, Baltimore/Washington D.C. area.
http://www.pdfconference.com or toll-free 877/278-2131.

---
You are currently subscribed to techwr-l as: archive -at- raycomm -dot- com
To unsubscribe send a blank email to leave-techwr-l-obscured -at- lists -dot- raycomm -dot- com
Send administrative questions to ejray -at- raycomm -dot- com -dot- Visit
http://www.raycomm.com/techwhirl/ for more resources and info.


Previous by Author: Re: Is IT growth slowing?
Next by Author: RE: ethics, morals in documentation?
Previous by Thread: The tech-writing job market
Next by Thread: RE: Identifying links without underlining them


What this post helpful? Share it with friends and colleagues:


Sponsored Ads