Joe W Larson
2005-03-15 17:30:49 UTC
I will soon be working on an application that will need to be deployed in
many countries. Most will be European language, but there may be some
non-European at later stages. Multi-language labelling and soforth is
planned and most of the design for that is already done.
But, this application will be deployed on small screens where real estate is
at a premium. There will need to be navigation buttons that will be too
small to fit significant text on them.
For instance, there will be page forward and page back buttons to scroll
through lists. A left arrow and a right arrow as symbols would be, I
assume, fairly universally understandable, at least with training and
documentation. But what about a confirm button? If this was English only,
I might just put "OK" on the button, or a green checkmark. Would a green
checkmark work in other languages? What about a cancel button-- would a red
X work?
Anyway, I am more interested in knowing if there are standards documents or
good recommendations on this as a general question-- are there a universal
set of symbols for this kind of thing that can be used?
many countries. Most will be European language, but there may be some
non-European at later stages. Multi-language labelling and soforth is
planned and most of the design for that is already done.
But, this application will be deployed on small screens where real estate is
at a premium. There will need to be navigation buttons that will be too
small to fit significant text on them.
For instance, there will be page forward and page back buttons to scroll
through lists. A left arrow and a right arrow as symbols would be, I
assume, fairly universally understandable, at least with training and
documentation. But what about a confirm button? If this was English only,
I might just put "OK" on the button, or a green checkmark. Would a green
checkmark work in other languages? What about a cancel button-- would a red
X work?
Anyway, I am more interested in knowing if there are standards documents or
good recommendations on this as a general question-- are there a universal
set of symbols for this kind of thing that can be used?
--
joe larson
"Do, or do not: there is no try" - Yoda
joe larson
"Do, or do not: there is no try" - Yoda