Projects/Usability/HIG/Combo Box: Difference between revisions
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Combo boxes (also known as a dropdown box) offer the user a choice of two or more mutually exclusive options. Their disadvantage compared to related controls like radio buttons or lists is that the options are not visible without further interaction. | Combo boxes (also known as a dropdown box) offer the user a choice of two or more mutually exclusive options. Their disadvantage compared to related controls like radio buttons or lists is that the options are not visible without further interaction. | ||
=== | === Guidelines === | ||
* For 3 or fewer options, use a set of [[Projects/Usability/HIG/Radio_Buttons|radio buttons]]. | * For 3 or fewer options, use a set of [[Projects/Usability/HIG/Radio_Buttons|radio buttons]]. | ||
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* Use sentence style capitalization for the label and the options. | * Use sentence style capitalization for the label and the options. | ||
* If activating a choice affects the appearance or the enabled state of other controls, place them next to the combo box or below the combo box with a space indentation. | * If activating a choice affects the appearance or the enabled state of other controls, place them next to the combo box or below the combo box with a space indentation. | ||
Controls that show the options without further user interaction are preferable, except for the following cases: | Controls that show the options without further user interaction are preferable, except for the following cases: |
Revision as of 16:15, 1 August 2008
Combo boxes (also known as a dropdown box) offer the user a choice of two or more mutually exclusive options. Their disadvantage compared to related controls like radio buttons or lists is that the options are not visible without further interaction.
Guidelines
- For 3 or fewer options, use a set of radio buttons.
- For 4 to 10 options, use a combo box instead of radio buttons.
- For more than 10 options, use a list.
- Label the combo box with a descriptive label to the left of the combo box.
- Use sentence style capitalization for the label and the options.
- If activating a choice affects the appearance or the enabled state of other controls, place them next to the combo box or below the combo box with a space indentation.
Controls that show the options without further user interaction are preferable, except for the following cases:
- the list of options may change over time,
- the contents are obvious from the label and the one selected item, for example Month and January
- the combo box is part of a related sequence of controls. For example, to set a reminder to ring 5 hours or minutes before or after an event.
Accessibility Guidelines
- Don't initiate an action when the user selects an item from a drop-down list.
- Don't forget to create a buddy relation so access keys are assigned.
- Make sure the items are easily accessible via keyboard by moving distinctive letters to the beginning of each option. For example, in a list of countries on continents, write Germany (Europe) instead of Europe/Germany.