Web interface design philosophy

The web interface should be as minimal as possible.

The web interface should work with text-only browsers, modern browsers, and everything in-between. Some may be nicer to use, but all functionality should be available everywhere.

Fast and ugly is better than slow and pretty.

It should be possible to build a decent web interface (at least for reader) using only HTML forms with a few JavaScript enhancements added on top.

2023 update: Hypermedia Systems and htmx seem to embody these ideas in a much better way than I could; a potential web app re-design will likely use them.

User interactions

Note

This list might lag behind reality; anyway, it all started from here.

User interactions, by logical groups:

  • entry

    • mark an entry as read

    • mark an entry as unread

    • go to an entry’s link

    • go to an entry’s feed

    • go to an entry’s feed link

  • entry list

    • see the latest unread entries

    • see the latest read entries

    • see the latest entries

  • entry list (feed)

    • mark all the entries as read

    • mark all the entries as unread

  • feed

    • add a feed

    • delete a feed

    • change a feed’s title

    • go to a feed’s entries

    • go to a feed’s link

  • feed list

    • see a list of all the feeds

  • other

    • be notified of the success/failure of a previous action

Controls (below), mapped to user interactions:

  • link

    • go to …

    • see …

  • simple button

    • mark an entry as read

    • mark an entry as unread

  • button with input

    • add a feed

    • change a feed’s title

  • button with checkbox

    • mark all the entries are read

    • mark all the entries are unread

    • delete a feed

Controls

There are three interaction modes, HTML-only, HTML+CSS, and HTML+CSS+JS. Each mode adds enhancements on top of the previous one.

In the HTML-only mode, all elements of a control are visible. Clicking the element that triggers the action (e.g. a button) submits a form and, if possible, redirects back to the source page, with any error messages shown after the action element.

In the HTML+CSS mode, some elements might be hidden so that only the action element is visible; in its inert state it should look like text. On hover, the other elements of the control should become visible.

In the HTML+CSS+JS mode, clicking the action element results in an asynchronous call, with the status of the action displayed after it.

Links are just links.

Simple buttons consist of a single button.

Buttons with input consist of an text input element followed by a button. The text input are hidden when not hovered.

Buttons with checkbox consist of a checkbox, a label for the checkbox, and a button. The checkbox and label are hidden when not hovered.

Page structure

Text TBD.

page structure, controls

page structure, controls

Pages

Text TBD.