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Alphabetical versus Random Order

Listening to one of Jared Spool’s podcasts on User Interface Engineering a while ago he mentioned something that at the time struck me as profound. He said, if we sort something in alphabetical order it’s practically the same as not sorting it at all. And how many times do we, as humans, just take that easy option to sort a list alphabetically and walk away absolved? I’m guilty of that usability sin as charged (yes, this site needs a top to bottom usability / design overhaul)!

When you think about it, of course Jared is right. Alphabetical only works when you’re in certain situations like at a library archive and you know the author or the book title. What about if you just know you want a book on Usability? Or cars? You need more than the alphabet. At that point you’re looking randomly along the shelf or applying other sorting methodologies. And imagine if you went to a website that sold music CDs and all you had was a gigantic alphabetically sorted list of album names. It may as well be a random purge of album names if you’re not exactly sure of what album you want when you arrive.

So it’s a good thing to keep in mind if you’re sorting information - avoid alphabetical ordering except in situations like the author name / book title combination. There are probably other, more human readable, ways to order that will be greatly appreciated by your site users.

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Currently Reading

Andy Clarke's Transcending CSS: the fine art of web design has been sitting on my bookshelf for several months and I've finally made the time to read it from end to end. My favourite thing about this book from the outset is that it's a designer's book, rather than a technician's manual, for web designers. The artwork and direction in Transcending CSS is enhanced by the attention to detail in the feel and texture of the book itself, the size of it's pages and the feel of the cover in your hands. It's definately a book that affords the act of being read. Looking forward to it.