Webpage Design
Definition
Webpage design is the
design subactivity that consists of the
cohesive collection of tasks involving all aspects of reusing,
producing, and maintaining the design of an individual
webpage.
Goals
The typical goals of webpage design are to design a webpage
that will:
- Be easy to learn and use.
- Be attractive and pleasing to use.
- Enable its users to efficiently perform their duties.
- Be easy to maintain.
Objectives
The typical objectives of webpage design are to:
- Determine the purpose of the webpage.
- Design the content, behavior, and navigation of the
webpage
- Create low-fidelity and high-fidelity prototypes of the
webpage
Examples of webpage design include:
- Design of a homepage.
- Design of a static informational webpage.
- Design of a data entry webpage.
- Design of a dynamically generated webpage.
Webpage design typically may begin when the following
preconditions hold:
Webpage design is typically complete when the following
postconditions hold:
- The webpage design is documented in the Human Interface
Design Document which has:
- Passed evaluation.
- Been accepted by the customer.
- Been delivered to the customer.
- The low-fidelity and high-fidelity prototypes have been
produced, evaluated, and accepted.
Tasks
Webpage design involves
the following producers performing the following design tasks:
Webpage design is typically performed using the following
environment(s) and associated tools:
-
Development Environment:
- Whiteboards
- Paper Prototypes
- Camera and props
- Graphic Design Tools (e.g., Photoshop, Visio)
- Typography Tools (e.g., Illustrator)
- Animation Tools (e.g., GIF Animator, GIFmation)
- Audio Tools
- Video Tools
- HTML, XML, and CSS Editors
- HTML, XML, and CSS Validators
- Link Checkers
- Browser (for debugging)
Webpage design results in the production of the
design work product set: