When you’re under pressure to produce a well-designed, easy-to-navigate mobile app, there’s no time to reinvent the wheel—and no need to. This handy reference provides more than 90 mobile app design patterns, illustrated by 1,000 screenshots from current Android, iOS, and Windows Phone apps.
Much has changed since this book’s first edition. Mobile OSes have become increasingly different, driving their own design conventions and patterns, and many designers have embraced mobile-centric thinking. In this edition, user experience professional Theresa Neil walks product managers, designers, and developers through design patterns in 11 categories:
- Navigation: get patterns for primary and secondary navigation
- Forms: break industry-wide habits of bad form design
- Tables: display only the most important information
- Search, sort, and filter: make these functions easy to use
- Tools: create the illusion of direct interaction
- Charts: learn best practices for basic chart design
- Tutorials & Invitations: invite users to get started and discover features
- Social: help users connect and become part of the group
- Feedback & Affordance: provide users with timely feedback
- Help: integrate help pages into a smaller form factor
- Anti-Patterns: what not to do when designing a mobile app
UI Patterns for iOS, Android, and Windows
Theresa Neilis a user experience consultant in Austin, Texas, where she designs rich applications for start-ups and Fortune500 companies.
Foreword;Preface;Intended Audience for This Book;O'Reilly Safari;How to Contact Us;Acknowledgments;Chapter 1: Navigation;1.1 Primary Navigation Patterns, Persistent;1.2 Primary Navigation Patterns, Transient;1.3 Secondary Navigation Patterns;Chapter 2: Forms;2.1 Sign In;2.2 Registration;2.3 Registration with Personalization;2.4 Multi-Step;2.5 Checkout;2.6 Calculatló“