鼠标指针:凡人一枚
Mouse Pointer as a Mere Mortal

原始链接: https://unsung.aresluna.org/mouse-pointer-as-a-mere-mortal/

作者对Lightroom点击按钮后鼠标指针自动移动的意外行为感到惊讶和不安。这种感觉具有侵入性,仿佛应用程序在物理上操纵用户的手,并引发了关于可用性的问题——自动化任务会阻碍用户的学习过程吗? 作者认为某些交互是“神圣的”,不应被劫持,并将这比作保护焦点、滚动以及撤销/复制粘贴等基本命令。然而,他们将其与尼尔·阿加瓦尔(Neal Agarwal)富有创意的项目形成对比,在项目中光标控制*感觉*自然且引人入胜。 过去Figma原型中探索的光标删除功能进一步说明了这一点——最初被认为“太奇怪”,现在似乎符合更集成、更少“像神一样”的光标体验的理念。最终,作者将这种光标操纵是令人愉悦的创新还是令人不安的控制权留给读者决定。

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原文

I gasped when I first saw Lightroom do this:

I know this won’t have the same effect on you just watching. What happened was that, after I clicked on the Disable button, Lightroom moved the mouse pointer for me.

I don’t think I have ever seen anything like this, and it provoked many thoughts and emotions:

  • This feels wrong. If the mouse is the extension of my fingers, and the mouse pointer the extension of the mouse, this is in effect the app grabbing my hand and moving it.
  • I did not know this was even possible. I can see how moving the mouse pointer programmatically can be useful in very specific situations (like scrubbing, or accessibility), but… not like this.
  • If you do something for the user, won’t that make it harder for them to remember how to do it themselves?
  • I’ve seen this kind of a thing many times in my career: Someone genuinely asks “hey, if this is such a huge transgression, why wasn’t it codified somewhere in the style guide?” But to me the challenge is that it’s hard to imagine everything that needs to be preemptively captured and prohibited. I have to imagine this stuff for living, and I literally did not think anyone would just move a mouse pointer like this.

So seeing this now, yeah, I’d bundle this inside the “some interactions are 100% sacred” bucket, alongside focus never being hijacked randomly (especially in the middle of typing), avoiding scrolling anything until I specifically ask, undo and copy/​paste needing utmost protection, and a few more.

In the opposite camp, here’s a fun new project by Neal Agarwal (only worth clicking on a computer with a mouse). This is a situation where it feels perfectly fine for a cursor to be hijacked; as a matter of fact, there is something really interesting about a mouse pointer feeling less like a deity floating above it all, and more like a regular in-game actor.

This reminded me of that time, in the earlier days of Figma, when I prototyped an interaction where you could select someone else’s pointer and press Backspace to delete it:

We didn’t seriously consider it because it felt just too weird, and not that effective in solving “the other person’s cursor is distracting me” problem. But today it feels like it belongs to the same category as the two examples above.

I’ll let you decide if it’s closer to Agarwal’s delight or Lightroom’s terror.

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