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Platinum Edition Using HTML 4, XML, and Java 1.2
You can also use images in the background (see Figure 1.8). Background images are read in and tiled to fill the entire browser window. Again, the critical thing is that the background image does not intrude on the content in the foreground. Additionally, you want to design your image so that it tiles seamlessly. Being able to see the boundaries where the tiling occurs can distract users from the information you want them to see.
Color ChoicesHTML provides control over other page colors, too. Controlling background and body text color was mentioned in the preceding section. You can control the color of three types of hypertext links as well: unvisited, visited, and active (a link is active only for the instant that the user clicks it). Colors for all three types should be chosen so that they provide good contrast with the background color or image. Beyond that, it is a good visitor service to color visited links a different color from unvisited links because this provides a visual cue to users as to where they have been in the site.
Iconography: Is It Intuitive?Many designers choose to represent major sections of a site with icons, small images that are meant to convey what type of content is found in each section. Yahoo!s main site uses icons for the navigation bar at the top of the home page (see Figure 1.9). The critical test that icons must pass is the intuitiveness test. Because you are using a small image to communicate a possibly complicated idea, you need to make sure that users can make a quick association between the image and the idea. The best way to do this is to test the icons with potential users. Get some people together who know nothing about the site youre designing and show them your icons. As they see each icon, ask them to write down what Web site information or functionality might be associated with it. After you have gathered their responses, share the icons with them again, this time giving the significance of each icon. Ask for their feedback on whether they think the icon truly represents what you want it to. By combining user responses from the first viewing with feedback from the second viewing, you should be able to make a good assessment of how intuitive your icons are.
Desirable Site ElementsExpectation is another powerful mental process that you can harness. Anticipating and meeting users expectations will impress them and make it more likely that they will come back to your site. Over time, Web users have come to rely on certain functionality being present on most Web sites. The next several sections catalog these features so that you can consider building them into the design for your site. Tables of ContentsA site-wide table of contents lays out everything available on the siteusually as hypertext links so that users can click and go wherever they want. Depending on the size of your site, it may take some time to compile and code a comprehensive table of contents. Remember, however, that users will appreciate the quick access to all parts of your site.
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