Web Form Design by Luke Wroblewski
Designing forms for the web is a tricky business. Left-aligned labels or right-aligned labels? What about putting them above or using none at all? Tool tips or more substantial help text? Thankfully, Yahoo design chief Luke Wroblewski is here to help.
Web Form Design: Filling in the Blanks is sadly not available in the UK, so if you really want to buy it, you’ll have to either download the digital copy or have it shipped from America (although it comes with the PDF version if you order a hard copy). I think it’s a shame because it would probably do well enough to justify its presence over here, but I guess that’s the cost of going with a smaller publisher.
Wroblewski begins by outlining the problem: “Forms suck. We should design accordingly.” He introduces the basic benefits of good form design and then moves on to cover every aspect of web form design in the clearly delineated chapters that follow.
Although there’s a lot to take in, Wroblewski writes very clearly and the full colour book is full of illustrations. Best of all, each chapter ends with a short list of best practices, so you don’t have to read through an entire section again when you use it as reference. Web Form Design also includes a number of contributions by other authors, labelled as ‘Perspectives’ in the book. These are well placed and offer additional context to the main text.
With the higher price due to shipping, my expectations were somewhat higher than usual for Web Form Design, but it’s more than justified the price I paid for it. It’s a very specialist book, but one that will probably stand the test of time better than a lot of other technical books. For anyone who designs web forms on a reasonably frequent basis, this is an essential read.
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