Skip to main content
replaced http://meta.stackexchange.com/ with https://meta.stackexchange.com/
Source Link

While this may make sense, it doesn't really follow the typical Stack Exchange UX principles.

Stack Exchange sites don't like to hide things from you; if you click on an element that you can't really do anything with at the time, you'll be told why, but if that element isn't there in the first place, you may be left wondering why.

Examples include allowing you to go through the close dialog process only to find out that you're out of votesonly to find out that you're out of votes (or flags) and showing you pending reviews in the top barshowing you pending reviews in the top bar even after you're out of reviews.

You can also see a similar behavior on locked questions, where comments are "not eligible for voting or flagging," but have vote and flag buttons nonetheless.

In fact, the only exception I can think of to this rule is also present on locked posts – the vote buttons on the question and its answers are hidden.

While this may make sense, it doesn't really follow the typical Stack Exchange UX principles.

Stack Exchange sites don't like to hide things from you; if you click on an element that you can't really do anything with at the time, you'll be told why, but if that element isn't there in the first place, you may be left wondering why.

Examples include allowing you to go through the close dialog process only to find out that you're out of votes (or flags) and showing you pending reviews in the top bar even after you're out of reviews.

You can also see a similar behavior on locked questions, where comments are "not eligible for voting or flagging," but have vote and flag buttons nonetheless.

In fact, the only exception I can think of to this rule is also present on locked posts – the vote buttons on the question and its answers are hidden.

While this may make sense, it doesn't really follow the typical Stack Exchange UX principles.

Stack Exchange sites don't like to hide things from you; if you click on an element that you can't really do anything with at the time, you'll be told why, but if that element isn't there in the first place, you may be left wondering why.

Examples include allowing you to go through the close dialog process only to find out that you're out of votes (or flags) and showing you pending reviews in the top bar even after you're out of reviews.

You can also see a similar behavior on locked questions, where comments are "not eligible for voting or flagging," but have vote and flag buttons nonetheless.

In fact, the only exception I can think of to this rule is also present on locked posts – the vote buttons on the question and its answers are hidden.

Source Link
AstroCB
  • 12.4k
  • 13
  • 113
  • 129

While this may make sense, it doesn't really follow the typical Stack Exchange UX principles.

Stack Exchange sites don't like to hide things from you; if you click on an element that you can't really do anything with at the time, you'll be told why, but if that element isn't there in the first place, you may be left wondering why.

Examples include allowing you to go through the close dialog process only to find out that you're out of votes (or flags) and showing you pending reviews in the top bar even after you're out of reviews.

You can also see a similar behavior on locked questions, where comments are "not eligible for voting or flagging," but have vote and flag buttons nonetheless.

In fact, the only exception I can think of to this rule is also present on locked posts – the vote buttons on the question and its answers are hidden.