I'm a full stack dev, far from a UI/UX designer, but I've been toiling over the feel of some of our newer apps that are very data table heavy. Luckily, we're already covering most of these bases, but WOW, the right aligning numbers + the month names advice are such great takeaways. Thank you!
Good video, but be mindful in regards to table row spacing. I had several clients who hated the increased row height because it means they can see less items on the screen in total. So, if you know you'll be dealing with power users, it's usually better to use the more compact version.
verry verry interesting ❤❤❤❤, thank u for sharing this tips. (I didn't like the music running in the background it's annoying a little bit ). but thank u i really need this video ❤
I agree with some of the elements that have changed - but only users will validate this design change. Icons may be better in some territories/age groups but text maybe easier to understand ? Who knows…
I'd like to somewhat disagree with the larger row padding. Fits less content on the screen. Some padding is needed and good but in a productivity app we shouldn't waste space unnecessarily
The advice given about tint colours, reducing contrast and changing text actions to icons only are all designed for a person with good visual ability. Have you considered the UX advice here in the context of accessibility? People who are older or who have cognitive disabilities may need the words over icons. People who have visual differences may need the colour contrast according to WCAG guidelines.
This doesn't break accessibility at all. It merely enhances it. It's good to always consider accessibility, but far better to really understand it. It's all about visual perception. Reducing contrast in areas he mentions actually has the net effect of perceptually increasing contrast in the areas that matter most to all users (the content). In regards to WCAG, one of the biggest mistakes newbies (and established designers who haven't learned perceptual psychology) make is to think that this applies to all elements on a page. It does not. This video is a great walkthrough of simplifying the design for all users, especially those with visual differences. And no, I don't know this channel at all. Just subscribed. Good stuff.
@@Stettafire Not true. Spend a few more years learning real design before jumping on the all-too-common accessibility band-wagon. It's a dead give away of newbie thinking. Think deeper.
@@Stettafire Nope. Reread. Redesign. Refine your thinking my friend. Designing where everything is of equal visual weight (contrast) is a bigger problem, and it affects all of our end users. Blindly adhering to standards meant as a guide (not a rule) is actually the biggest problem, because it leads to designs that are overly complex and busy. This is a problem mostly for newbies, but also a lot of senior level designers who never really considered the effect on their users over and above what standards committees have attempted to lay out. We see it all the time in corporate design. 90% of it is awful, but technically correct. Rise up and go beyond.
I absolutely disagree with increasing row heights, especially in the example shown. When I'm looking at a table it means I'm looking at data, and I want to see as much of it on the screen as I can reasonably comfortably, which the left example does well. There's a reason Excel looks like it does.
Have any of these tips ever been scientifically tested? Replacing labels with icons tends to INCREASE confusion as not everyone is familiar with symbols but most people can read text.
Completely disagree on a few of these: Row height. In many instances, tighter tables are more readable and are what the users want. Many times I've redesigned tables and the users complain the table is harder to use. Decluttering is not always better for UX.
I'm a full stack dev, far from a UI/UX designer, but I've been toiling over the feel of some of our newer apps that are very data table heavy. Luckily, we're already covering most of these bases, but WOW, the right aligning numbers + the month names advice are such great takeaways. Thank you!
thank you so much, as a dev with zero experience in ux and ui, this is extremly helpful!
Im a UI/UX apps developer and this helped me a lot! Im genuinely subscribing to your channel, thanks!
Love the video! Would be great if you made a follow-up for a filtering function that sometimes goes above the table.
Maybe it could be incorporated with the search
you are rapping through the melody man 🔥 Thank you for the video, very useful :)
I thought there were going to be just obvious facts, but these are really hepful. Thanks!
Really Helpful to me who dont have any UI/UX knowledge. TY
Good video, but be mindful in regards to table row spacing. I had several clients who hated the increased row height because it means they can see less items on the screen in total. So, if you know you'll be dealing with power users, it's usually better to use the more compact version.
this was really nice short tips, thank you
I like to use currency values right aligned and in a monospaced font.
Thank you so much! This is extremely valuable
verry verry interesting ❤❤❤❤, thank u for sharing this tips.
(I didn't like the music running in the background it's annoying a little bit ). but thank u i really need this video ❤
Nice! How can i handle the space (width) with little tables, for example, two columns.
Great TIPS, thank you for doing thing. Keep doing this Someday your youtube will grow more follower to you.
I agree with some of the elements that have changed - but only users will validate this design change. Icons may be better in some territories/age groups but text maybe easier to understand ? Who knows…
wonderful, thank you!
Nice presentation of what is helpful to the user.
what about making every second row darker?
this is awesome! Thanks a lot!
Very helpful UI tips. Thank you!
Thank you!) So useful tips)
Very useful, thank you!
Who decides wich is harsher and which is easier on the eyes ?
I'd like to somewhat disagree with the larger row padding. Fits less content on the screen. Some padding is needed and good but in a productivity app we shouldn't waste space unnecessarily
super helpful, thanks 🙏
Thanks for your tips. But it will help if you say in the beginning if that is your opinion or do you also have verifiable sources?
Nice tips , thanks
Thank you very much, very useful
Great, it helped alot
The View Icon is choosed badly. Its a visibility icon...
nice video!
Good content but, please, drop the music and use a more relaxed voice...
Should dates be centered too?
For any data that includes numbers, it is better to use monospace fonts. That is not the case here so they all look misaligned.
Gracias!! Muy útil.
The advice given about tint colours, reducing contrast and changing text actions to icons only are all designed for a person with good visual ability. Have you considered the UX advice here in the context of accessibility? People who are older or who have cognitive disabilities may need the words over icons. People who have visual differences may need the colour contrast according to WCAG guidelines.
This doesn't break accessibility at all. It merely enhances it. It's good to always consider accessibility, but far better to really understand it. It's all about visual perception. Reducing contrast in areas he mentions actually has the net effect of perceptually increasing contrast in the areas that matter most to all users (the content). In regards to WCAG, one of the biggest mistakes newbies (and established designers who haven't learned perceptual psychology) make is to think that this applies to all elements on a page. It does not. This video is a great walkthrough of simplifying the design for all users, especially those with visual differences. And no, I don't know this channel at all. Just subscribed. Good stuff.
@@xeler8rThis is false. The accessibility here is a big problem.
@@Stettafire Not true. Spend a few more years learning real design before jumping on the all-too-common accessibility band-wagon. It's a dead give away of newbie thinking. Think deeper.
@@Stettafire Nope. Reread. Redesign. Refine your thinking my friend. Designing where everything is of equal visual weight (contrast) is a bigger problem, and it affects all of our end users. Blindly adhering to standards meant as a guide (not a rule) is actually the biggest problem, because it leads to designs that are overly complex and busy. This is a problem mostly for newbies, but also a lot of senior level designers who never really considered the effect on their users over and above what standards committees have attempted to lay out. We see it all the time in corporate design. 90% of it is awful, but technically correct. Rise up and go beyond.
It's super helpful tips.
thank you so much
I absolutely disagree with increasing row heights, especially in the example shown. When I'm looking at a table it means I'm looking at data, and I want to see as much of it on the screen as I can reasonably comfortably, which the left example does well. There's a reason Excel looks like it does.
fan-tastic!! lucky like #568 - cool breakpoint unit - ;)
Excellent
thanks!
Thank you
thats what i nee
thanks bro
Have any of these tips ever been scientifically tested? Replacing labels with icons tends to INCREASE confusion as not everyone is familiar with symbols but most people can read text.
Perfect
Useful
Please get rid of the background music
Right allign numbers? That's bullshit!
Completely disagree on a few of these: Row height. In many instances, tighter tables are more readable and are what the users want. Many times I've redesigned tables and the users complain the table is harder to use. Decluttering is not always better for UX.
Very helpful, thank you!