Why does logging out of Stack Overflow require three clicks? Can’t we just have a link on the navigation bar itself like most websites would do?
As a web developer, I am curious about this.
Why does logging out of Stack Overflow require three clicks? Can’t we just have a link on the navigation bar itself like most websites would do?
As a web developer, I am curious about this.
Our "log out" functionality used to be hidden on the user profile page, so the current location is actually an improvement. Preliminary designs did have the "log out" link in the top bar next to "help". But as we added more items (including "review" and "mod" for some users) it became harder to justify the location. People have different expectations of what "logging out" means, so depending on what you expect, the link can have surprising results.
I also looked around at some sites I happened to have open at the time and discovered that having a one-click logout button was actually less common than we thought:
In an internal email, I wrote:
I didn't cherry pick these sites: FogBugz, Expensify, and the New York Times were the only sites in my recent history that did not hide the sign out link. Top bar, direct links to "log out" are (if my sample is representative) an outdated design element. The sites that hide "log out" are not scummy sites. Rather they are sites that have lots of data to display in the top bar and don't want to waste space on a link that few people intend to use.
They follow the design principle that you should make actions that you don't want your users to do, harder to do. So it takes 3 clicks for most people to log out, instead of 1 easy click to log out.
For example, they also do this with closing questions in the review queue. Leave open is only 1 click, but to close vote, it's 2, 3, or 4 clicks depending on close reason.