1. Delight is overblown, in my opinion. I think most of the people truly delighted by fancy animation are just other designers.
2. It's more useful to think about state when deciding when to animate. Could the user have trouble perceiving the change in state that just occurred? If so, then use an animation to help them visualize what happened. I believe this is the primary reason to use an animation - all others are vanity.
Isn't this just very basic optical feedback to indicate that a component is clickable at all and that the click was registered?
Nerdsnipe perpetuated by other engineers/designers admiring it on Twitter. Nothing wrong with that, just shouldn’t pretend that most users care.
I might delight in seeing an animation the first three times, after that I want it off. Don't add extra latency to my process.
If (and that’s a big if) animation is used in moderation only when it actually communicates something and isn’t an active impedence (as demonstrated in the linked post), I think it has a significant effect for users. It’s just not the effect that many might expect.
Meaningful, unintrusive animations are one of the myriad puzzle pieces that come together to form a positive impression. They’re a sizeable chunk of that last 20% that separates “good” and “excellent” in users’ minds. They’re not strictly necessary, but between two equally good competitors they’ll help one pull ahead of the other, because users come away with a stronger impression of “solidness”. It’s not unlike how people tend to consider heft and resistance to flexing as markers of higher quality in physical products.
The problem is that since a decade or so ago, UI design as a whole has veered heavily in the direction of vibes, slideshow wow factor, and “branding value” (I felt a pang of nausea just writing that) and away from the volumes of well-researched best practices, and regard for good use of animation has been lost along with it. We’re well overdue for a correction that pushes UI design back in the direction of practical usability and away from Dribbble appeal.
Appreciating delight (for it's own sake) in software design I'd consider a core trait of (old-school?) Apple fans. E.g., lamenting the decline of whimsy in the post-Jobs era.
I don't know of a canonical piece that summarizes this idea, but it's referenced a bit in this short piece https://daringfireball.net/linked/2024/12/05/festivitas
I think there's truth to it being relatively niche, appreciating delight that is, but it's certainly not confined just to designers. E.g., like I'm saying here, a core trait of Apple fans is appreciating these kinds of details.
This really is what UI polish of any kind is all about. You feel like you can trust it more, it feels more robust and reliable. Animation and gestures are a part of this, but it’s only the last mile after everything already feels robust.
Before you make it more glitzy you have to make it less glitchy.
woah! you are starting from the point an individual preference is any metric to gneral public preferences and understanding... there's not a SINGLE study cited on the blog!
For B2B (especially enterprise B2B), your software is just a tool your customers' employees need for their day jobs. Fancy animations, multi-colored gradients (because gradients mean "AI" now, right), and other gaudy crap does not make it easier for anyone to do their job. It's just noise -- constantly distracting users who are just trying to navigate through dense, text-heavy dashboards.
If you want to design "pretty" and "delightful" experiences, then it doesn't make much sense to join a company that revolves around CRM/ERP workflows. Work for a company whose value is directly tied to users' warm and fuzzy feelings.
In a nutshell: put two different frames in sequence, and you have an animation.
That is how "our army of well trained monkeys" can get in to fix the "oops. something went wrong" problem.
#include <rant_about_paternizing_users.h>
Animation is when more than one consecutive step happens on it’s own. I’d argue that even tooltips appearing and disappearing after a timeout doesn’t constitute an animation, because the disappearance isn’t immediately consecutive with the appearance, and (maybe more importantly) the intervening state of the tooltip being shown is meaningful to the user as a distinct state.
If you go in and read TFA you'll see that's one of the main points being made.
I think this is the only justified use of animation in UI, however I wasn't satisfied with the dilemma of increasing perceived transition while increasing perceived UI latency.
I found it's possible to get the best of both for event triggered state changes i.e clicking on stuff, by sticking to ease-out based transitions, where the start of the transition is instant and the end decelerates.
This makes it feel just as snappy as no animation, while still helping to communicate a transition, because we are more sensitive to the latency of the start of the transition when it's an event - since we are anticipating a reaction, which is satisfied as soon as it starts to react.
I disagree with this, as much as I want it to be true. Just ask an Apple/iPhone user to use an Android phone for a week and then ask them how the experience was, they'll tell you something felt off or janky about it, and a lot of it comes down to really well designed animations on iOS for everything you interact with.
Regular consumers may not use the word delight to describe the user experience, but they do notice it when faced with what is (to them) an inferior experience.
To the point people regularly ask for a stronger setting to straight disable animations and not just reduce them.
I absolutely do believe that software can be delightful. Linear comes to mind as an example - there are lots of little nuances to their interactions and it just feels so good to use.
I've had the same feeling with more utilitarian interfaces, but it's pretty rare. I don't know why. I expect it's partly because we have different expectations for programs than we do for games, partly because the context and the interactions are pretty different, and partly because most organizations do not have the will or the ability to make interfaces that satisfying. (After all, it's the worst sort of thing for most organizations: something that requires taste, time and experience and cannot be managed, measured or executed by committee.)
I am copying this so that I can use it later when the marketing comes in and suggests we devote more dev time to yet another landing page renewal when we are at capacity just handling Bug tickets
So now I just have the setting to be super fast, but not disabled. Works perfectly well.
This experience has stopped being the case for quite some time now. Sure, a 60 USD low-end device is no ground for proper comparison with a 1000 dollar one, but androids in a similar category absolutely have similar animations and "niceties". I have actually recently moved from iOS to Android, and I do prefer the latter's visual UX. I will even go as far and say that there are less UI bugs.
(As for "smoothness", sure, apple's SoC game is far above any android manufacturer's, which helps a lot)