An icon for "pass"? #774
Replies: 16 comments 19 replies
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How about something like that? It can be drawn in the same style as our current agree/disagree. I don't think we'll ever capture all of these uses 🙂. But one danger that I see is, if the icon is specific enough like the above, may give the wrong impression. Namely that the participant skips the statement temporarily, only to find it popping up later, which is not correct. |
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Used mod privileges and added numbers here, so easily to reference :) I totally see why this has been something avoided. Balance is hard. Thanks for spelling out all those clear reasons, Colin. Worth moving to knowledgebase too? Seems the sorta subtle thing one usually only learns from years of experience. I've seen lots of em myself, but kinda surprising to see it all laid out. Hot-take order of pref 😄 : 5b > 5a > 4 > 2 > 3 >> 1
Random thoughts:
Found similar icon to Giorgos' on noun project: My alt suggestion: similar to (5-7), repurpose the "skip" icon (noun project search results) that ppl know from youtube (and VCRs???) |
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The skip icon (8) is perfect. It just makes sense. And I think covers most, if not all, of Collin's use cases - making me a liar when I said that we'll never capture all of them 🙂 . It might be preferable to not put an icon at all (I'm still partial to that), but if we do, the skip icon fits the bill like a glove. PS: I like this minimalist skip button with one triangle better than the standard two-triangle version. I think it conveys the message just fine and looks better in smaller size. |
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Interesting!
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I don't think anyone would confuse that. Skip may be even less ambiguous in multi-language situations. @ThenWho what about your language context? How do |
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I also like |
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I like these two designs because they fit with the aesthetic of the existing agree/disagree circles. One downside is that they don't carry meaningful information like the "skip" icon options do. |
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@kerrickstaley I'm not sure those don't carry meaning. Contextually, an empty circle could be at least loosely associated with 'no action' or 'no position given that the style of the other icons is also a circle. Nice thought. Pointing out that we use circles, and considering 'skip' as terminology does bring to mind another visual: |
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Dear all thank you for this great conversation! We are currently struggling how to translate 'pass' into Dutch while capturing all meanings that are listed at the start of this conversation. In our Polis testrun users indicated that they were unsure about the third voting option and did not feel inclined to use it. What do people think about a grey circle with a question mark in it? It is also very universal. |
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Reflecting on 'skip' again, and on what you wrote @patcon:
I think 'skip' gives you a sense of flow in the process - like you're listening to music, and it's ok to not listen to all songs in your play list, just move to the next. At the end of the day, you can still compare notes with your friends and exchange recommendations, find out which music genre you 'belong to', etc. ➡️ I think it is the correct paradigm here. 'Pass' on the other hand reminds me of a classic poll - something to do when you really have to, and you don't expect anything to come back to you. You do as a chore and then promptly forget about it. This is the problem I'm having with most of the alternatives. Maybe the poll paradigm is good to orient people jumping in for the first time, but stands against a lot of pol.is features (e.g. reminder emails to come back etc). |
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@ThenWho for the avoidance of doubt, we would never make the voting options configurable except in the case of accurate and standardized translations, for a host of reasons. They are essential to the core of the platform. |
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@Annedezeeuw thanks so much! It seems like we're on the right track here. We already have ⏭ Skip / Unsure |
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Some from existing icon sets, in case we wish to use them: From material design
From font-awesome
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So I have shared these ideas in the Code for NL community and here is some of the feedback:
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@fredrikoviedo's comment got me thinking... instead of hoping that each language has a perfect word that captures all the meanings we know that pass can... perhaps we could choose a UI element that allows an arbitary number of words/options, without breaking the UI. The perk of this approach is that multiple words might allow multiple icons. Examples of this might be something like GitHub's multi-option buttons: Or perhaps a button that changes like a carousel. Or perhaps the trick is to figure out ways to fit up to "x" number of separate buttons into the UI, which all code to "zero" in the underlying math. Languages that need more strings, use them. To be honest, I think most of these ideas are bad :) But I also think using a single string/icon is bad, because it leaves to chance that non-english language speakers will be tipped off to the full extent of purpose within the option. Since the use of pass is so important to the emergent forms of participation in a Polis conversation (and not every language can have the same nuance as an english "pass"), it feels better that a UI accommodates an expansive set of options, which all code to "zero" in the underlying matrix |
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Currently, Polis does not have an icon for
pass
, only for agree and disagree. Thanks to the team at https://twitter.com/netwerkdem for raising this. Since I was about to respond to them, I decided to respond publicly to bring in broader perspectives and document my thoughts.This button does a lot of work. It might signal:
I can't think of an icon that hits all of these. Specifically, I don't want to discourage people from using this as a catch-all by accidentally signaling one of these. By default, we'll leave it as is because people seem to use it a lot, and thus we understand it to have significant utility as is (ie., we do not believe people are not presently confused, and optimizing it for one use case may in fact be overfitting to that use case).
Contenders for the icon, from my mood board:
https://emojipedia.org/twitter/twemoji-13.0.1/person-shrugging/
I don't presently believe any of these do a solid job at all of the above tasks (and there may be many more — the point of having a catch all also functions to sharpen what
agree
anddisagree
mean, thus keeping it general does even more work).Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
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