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There are many answers about tools such as IDEs that tell something like "go to that menu and press this and then choose the option something". I think these questions would benefit from a standardized approach to formatting that visually highlights the menu items.

A reason to have a special formatting for menu items is that it would indicate that names of menu items don't fit into the syntactic structure of the sentence, just like monospaced delete is not a verb but an operator, for example, and also one should consider Install a noun (a menu item) rather than a verb (an incentive to install something).

I personally prefer making the menu items Italic → Connecting them with arrows → Whenever they are nested. Is it appropriate? Or could it draw attention away from the post itself? Are there any existing approaches that people commit to?

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  • 15
    Take a pic. Or do whatever works. I usually do "foo -> bar -> baz" where foo, bar and baz are the actual labels on the menu items.
    – user1228
    May 15, 2015 at 17:41

6 Answers 6

23

A numbered list or bulleted list is sufficient. You can nest items by indenting them four more spaces under a bulleted or numbered item. I prefer that folks bold the name of the menu item.

Example:

  • On the File menu, click Edit.
14

There is always the hand drawn circle approach. I use these all the time in my answer in order to make visually obvious what I was referring to.

Here is a slightly extended example of showing interface steps using this approach.

Print Screen

Open paint

enter image description here

Paste your screenshot

enter image description here

Crop the section you wish to show as the next step

enter image description here

Draw the red circle on the highlighted area, copy the image, and then open the image dialogue in your answer

enter image description here

When the dialogue opens, use paste to automatically upload the clipboard image. It will show a preview that you accept to finish this step of the visual aid.

enter image description here

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    Although traditional, this isn't all that helpful for people using screen readers, slow internet connections, etc.!
    – jonrsharpe
    May 15, 2015 at 16:55
  • @jonrsharpe - The image may not help people using screen readers. Usually you also accompany them with a small sentence explaining what is going on in the image though so they should still be supported. As for slow internet connections, I don't think that 400 bytes is really going to be that detrimental to page load time when compared with the overall size of the page.
    – Travis J
    May 15, 2015 at 16:57
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    There's not enough circles to explain why circles are best. May 15, 2015 at 17:04
  • 2
    @TravisJ AOL just released they still have 2.1 million people using dial up. It might affect them :)# May 15, 2015 at 19:44
  • 2
    Considering that this page is going to be 200 kb to load, I doubt another .4kb will affect that load at all. Really, advocating against using images because there are still AOL users or slow connections is not that valid of an argument. Further, a 56k modem only loads 4.5kb per second, so I sincerely doubt those users are anywhere to be found here. And if they magically wait for the minute and a half to load one of these pages then I do not believe another fraction of a second will affect them.
    – Travis J
    May 15, 2015 at 19:53
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    @jonrsharpe If we didn't post images, screen reader users would miss the chance to interpret the meaning of every [enter image description here] with the power of their imagination! May 16, 2015 at 4:17
  • 1
    Or you can combine...
    – TLama
    May 16, 2015 at 8:31
  • 1
    If you draw with Paint screenshots of Paint does it become Paintception?
    – meneldal
    May 18, 2015 at 3:38
6

Simple is best. I use arrows and occasionally bolding. Nothing more needed.

3

I tend to use pipes -

  • Click "File | Open"
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I personally prefer making the menu items Italic → Connecting them with arrows → Whenever they are nested. Is it appropriate?

Yes, totally. It is the standard approach - emphasise the menu titles somehow and connect them with something arrow-like for nested menus.

However, how you do that exactly is left to you. I've seen people using simple > signs for arrows or fancy unicode characters. For highlighting names, all sorts of formatting is used:

  • bolded: options > select… > title
  • italic: optionsselect…title
  • inline code: options -> select… -> title
  • <kbd> tags: optionsselect…title
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I take a good screenshot any time I cannot figure out how to explain something/ problem, times where words are not enough or are confusing.

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