Book Image

iPhone User Interface Cookbook

By : Cameron Banga
Book Image

iPhone User Interface Cookbook

By: Cameron Banga

Overview of this book

The incredible growth rates for the iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad have pushed consumers to a new “App” economy, with developers racing to the platform. Mobile touch-centric interfaces vary greatly from traditional computing platforms, and programmers as well as designers must learn to adapt to the new form-factor.The iPhone User Interface Cookbook offers a complete breakdown of standard interface design on the iPhone, iPod touch, and iPad. You will learn the tools behind the trade, how to properly utilize standard interface elements, and custom UI tricks that will help your work stand out on the App Store.The book is designed to be a complete overview of interface design on all iOS platforms, offering insight and an inside look into app design. A variety of topics are covered, starting with an overview of tools for the app interface designer, touching upon popular interface components such as the Tab Bar, and offering suggestions for complex game interfaces. Whether you’re new to the platform or a seasoned developer with numerous applications in the App Store, this book strives to teach everyone simple and easy to implement tips for iOS interface design. Regardless of skill level, the iPhone User Interface Cookbook offers a detailed breakdown of all things interface design.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
iPhone User Interface Cookbook
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
PacktLib.PacktPub.com
Preface
The Importance of Direct Manipulation
If you need a stylus, you blew it

Properly supporting copy and paste


Copy and paste are two common text manipulation techniques on the iPhone and iPad, allowing users to quickly move text between fields or applications, much like on a standard desktop computer.

Copy and paste came late to iOS, not falling in place until the release of version 3.0 in the summer of 2009. Apple took their time in implementing the feature, waiting to release the functionality until they had perfected the feature interface.

In some applications, specifically iPad magazines or creative pieces with long prose, we may find it easier or more effective to take a design route that keeps the user from being able to copy and paste. Magazines are specifically notorious, displaying text content in an image so that copy and paste selection is impossible.

However, such interface behavior can be quite detrimental to the overall usefulness of our app, while also making our work much less accessible to those with disabilities. These are the outcomes that...