Linked by Eugenia Loli on Thu 27th Dec 2007 05:37 UTC, submitted by Esther Schindler
Graphics, User Interfaces "It's hateful when a developer takes a 'shortcut' that saves that individual a couple of minutes, but thereafter causes extra effort from every single user. Awful as they are, these application design errors - all the fault of lazy developers - are entirely too common."
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Chicken Blood
Member since:
2005-12-21

A program should never guess or try and fix a user's input mistake. The user is to blame. Rather ask to enforce a certain arguably more readable syntax than for the program to try and guess the correct answer.


The user is to blame? Don't you think the application should help the user wherever it can? Are computers not a tool to serve us and help us get our work done more quickly?

If you disagree with this, don't ever question why more people aren't buying your software.


The losing context part I can agree with to an extent, but when using *NIX based, one application for one task and combining them, you won't have that problem either.


Explain. As a UNIX user for over 10 years, I fail to see how being UNIX diminishes the problem any.


Error messages can be more descriptive, yes. With that I agree completely, but even so it's still mostly just a Windows based problem.


There are examples of bad error messages on all platforms. The OS has nothing to do with it.

Edited 2007-12-29 20:06 UTC

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