Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Queensland Safe Driving - Coggle Diagram
Queensland Safe Driving
Task requirements
-
Requirements
-
Symbolise
• Ideas for user interfaces using sketches, annotated diagrams, images, or screenshots
-
Analyse the Problem
• Scope, constraints, and limitations
• Personal, social, and economic impacts
-
• Data, programming, and user-interface relationships
-
Application
Design Principles
Proximity
Where elements are positioned or grouped in relation to each other, perhaps 'clumping' elements near each other that have a perceived relationship (or avoiding those that don't)
Contrast
Contrast refers to opposing aesthetic qualities (i.e., what you see when you compare things that are different) and can be used for to create emphasis or focal point
Harmony
Interpreting the proximity to make sure components as a whole provide valuable meaning and are complementary across the interface. For example, sometimes it is better to split datasets across screens for example to avoid confusion
Balance
Arrangement of components of a visual communication in relation to a real or implied central axis / equilibrium / symmetry
Alignment
Elements should 'line up', commonly used in HTML sign up forms
Repetition
Repeated elements (such as page constructs, sections or product layouts) which helps predictability
-
Useability Principles
accessibility
ability to be used by many different people, even people with disabilities
-
-
-
-
Design Element
Line
A line can be a starting place, a marker or trigger to change
Shape
Shapes can use lines (straight or curved) to develop two-dimensional zoning and the implied boundary of an object. Shapes are good for conveying structure around data. The simplest form of shapes with data is a table. Shapes could also be a circular icon to centre a user to a record button on a phone
-
Colour
Choice of colour matters. Be consistent throughout application, and make sure colours chosen are compatible with each other (perhaps use a colour wheel)
-
Point
Smallest element of visual communication, can be a dot but not necessarily circular
-
Space
Used to support meaning or zone groups of data (i.e. space between elements). Used consistently to develop predictability
Proportion and scale
Ratio and size. Look for the "Golden Ratio". In mathematics, two quantities are in the golden ratio if their ratio is the same as the ratio of their sum to the larger of the two quantities
-
data
Users and Their Needs
-
-
-
-
• Viewing Mediums: The design must adapt to desktop, tablet, phone, and laptop formats.
Displayed Data
• Event Information: Name, Description, Time/Date, Location, Images, Pricing, Reviews.
• User Data: Account type (staff or standard), past reviews, attended events, and any events they have hosted.
-
-
development problems
Proposed Web Solution
-
-
• Individual event pages with key details (date, time, place, price).
-
-
-
-
-
functions
Standard users
-
• Interact with venues on Google Maps (e.g., see exact locations).
-
-
-
-
Admin Users
-
• Edit event details (e.g., time, venue).
-
Users and Their Needs
-
-
-
-
• Viewing Mediums: The design must adapt to desktop, tablet, phone, and laptop formats.