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| ==Definition==
| | {{ Moved To Community | KDE_Visual_Design_Group/HIG/Toggle Buttons }} |
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| A toggle button is a button which stays down when clicked once and goes up when clicked a second time.
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| ==When to Use==
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| Use a toggle button to indicate a '''state'''.
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| Example: A word processor should use toggle buttons to indicate the state of "Bold", "Italic" or "Underline" formatting.
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| ==When not to Use==
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| Do not use a toggle button to indicate an '''action'''.
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| Example: A music player should not use a toggle button to implement a combined Play/Pause button. It should use a normal button and adjust the icon and label to represent the action which would be performed when clicked.
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| ==Icon and Label==
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| There are two ways to label a toggle button:
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| 1. Describe the state which is reached when the button is down:
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| In this case the icon and label should not change when the button is down.
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| For example a button to toggle the visibility of a sidebar could say "Show Sidebar". It should still say "Show Sidebar" when the button is down: it should not be changed to "Hide Sidebar".
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| If you want to change the button text to "Hide Sidebar" when the sidebar is shown then you should use a normal button, not a toggle button.
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| An alternative is to reduce the button to a noun if it is not ambiguous. In this example the button label could be reduced to "Sidebar".
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| [[File:Toggle-button-summary.png]]
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| 2. Describe the '''current''' state:
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| In this case the label will often include a passive verb. For example a button to lock or unlock an element would say "Unlocked" when it is up and "Locked" when it is down. The icon should match the label.
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Latest revision as of 12:09, 4 August 2016