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DSVIS
2006
Springer

Visual Design of User Interfaces by (De)composition

14 years 2 months ago
Visual Design of User Interfaces by (De)composition
Most existing graphical user interfaces are usually designed for a fixed context of use, thus making them rather difficult to modify for other contexts of use, such as for other users, other platforms, and other environments. This paper addresses this problem by introducing a new visual design method for graphical users interfaces referred to as "visual design by (de)composition". In this method, any individual or composite component of a graphical user interface is submitted to a series of operations for composing a new interface from existing components and for decomposing an existing one into smaller pieces that can be used in turn for another interface. For this purpose, any component of a user interface is described by specifications that are consistently written in a user interface description language that remains hidden to the designers' eyes. We first define the composition and decomposition operations and individually exemplify them on some small examples. We t...
Sophie Lepreux, Jean Vanderdonckt, Benjamin Michot
Added 13 Oct 2010
Updated 13 Oct 2010
Type Conference
Year 2006
Where DSVIS
Authors Sophie Lepreux, Jean Vanderdonckt, Benjamin Michotte
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