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Bongie2019-01-04 20:17:08
Design
Bongie, 2019-01-04 20:17:08

Do such tabas have life?

I'm trying to come up with navigation for moving between tabs in e-commerce, and it would seem that I came up with it, but the question immediately arises: "why scroll?". I thought it was easier to make a couple of jerks on the wheel than to aim at a specific scoreboard.
But dont know. I would like to know if this way of moving through tabs is viable?

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2 answer(s)
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Rustam Bainazarov, 2019-01-04
@Bongie

Clickable tabs are needed to limit the need for scrolling. You don't really have tabs anymore.
Let's imagine a situation. After the block with tabs, you still have a lot of information (sliders with additional products, cross-products, something else). And to reach this information, you need to scroll through all the tabs.
Probably, the very idea of ​​such tabs (although these are not exactly tabs) has its right to life, but it all depends on the context of the design and functionality in which they will be located.
You got a synthesis of a tab and that thing with the title of the block that is on the screen (I don’t know what it’s called, something like this ). From tabs - hiding the content of other tabs and fixing the beginning of the content of tabs in one place, from the second thing - the idea of ​​​​scrolling and indicating the current semantic block.
Most likely, such an implementation will confuse, but it is necessary to test, of course. The mass user is used to either tabs or scrolling.

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Matvey Pravosudov, 2019-01-04
@oxyberg

I would like to know if this way of moving through tabs is viable?
Certainly! Very often, this UI pattern is used in food delivery one-pagers, where the categories of dishes sit in tabs, and when scrolling, the active tab changes.
But in general, it is difficult to correctly answer the question with a separation from the real context of the user. Somewhere such tabs will work well, but somewhere badly.

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