Switch to English?
Yes
Переключитись на українську?
Так
Переключиться на русскую?
Да
Przełączyć się na polską?
Tak
Now the team has started working on the inclusive design.
In the U.S. has already begun a trial with websites that are not suitable for people with limited capabilities, so today this topic is extremely important.
The rules and requirements for the site are already collected in a document, which must be followed to create an inclusive design.
Let’s talk about the basic requirements for the most convenient navigation.
The navigation must answer the user to the following questions:
Where am I?Where can I go?What happens if I go there?Therefore, the widespread solution "hamburger menu" should be avoided.
What is the hamburger menu?
Question 1: “Where am I?”
By hiding the navigation in subsidiaries, the user does not know which page of the program of the top level is the program.Users lose orientation in your general information architecture.
Question 2: “Where can I go?”
By hiding other top-level pages, users can no longer move directly to other areas of the program/site.Instead, they need to return to the top level of information architecture.
Question 3: “What if I go there?”
The only element of navigation on the child's screen is the back or forward button.It doesn’t indicate the user where he’s going by pressing it.
Alternatives to the hamburger menu:
- Lower menu-navigation for mobile applications
You are
- Navigation with vertical signature side
- Step-by-step breakdown menu (this is a more complex hamburger modification: the menu adapts to the width of the screen and shows as many navigations as possible, and everything else - places under the "More")

So the conclusion: try everything that you do not create.
Every design is amazing to test with real users.
Work details
Budget 11 USD
Added 8 November 2019
139 views
Freelancer
Polina Vinokurova
Ukraine Kyiv
No reviews

Available for hire Available for hire
On the service 7 years