When I open a watched tag, I am mostly interested in seeing the tagged questions, not in unwatching or ignoring that tag. I presume most users think alike.
Yet recent design change made those two buttons most prominent (due to size and placement):
When I open a watched tag, I am mostly interested in seeing the tagged questions, not in unwatching or ignoring that tag. I presume most users think alike.
Yet recent design change made those two buttons most prominent (due to size and placement):
I hardly post on Meta, but SO front page has been changing quite a bit too many times lately, with no improvement to make up for the inconvenience! I'd go one step further than the OP's proposal, and remove the entire tag description block. We don't need this on every single page, forever! Who really needs a tag description permanently cluttering the space?
If we made the [Python]
clickable or hoverable, that'll amply do.
The watch/unwatch/ignore/nore is already on the right side bar, it is not necessary there.
Surely, there must be other, & better ways to induce people's goodwill to edit and improve tag definitions.
info
button between the number of questions and Newest button... how about you click on that instead @Anders? The we can remove the whole oversized "Questions tagged [whatever]", the tags appear in the search box smack above it anyway.
Commented
Jul 7, 2018 at 1:11
Come on people, frequently accessed important functionality definitely deserves prominent exposure in the GUI, that's like good UX 101.
It is beyond perfectly clear that people frequently unwatch and ignore tags they have previously subscribed to. I myself do it all the time. 5-6 times a day at least.
Which is why I feel like this new eye sore is perfectly justified. Losing it is not desirable, as it will severely impede the proficiency at which I use the site.
OK, now to get constructive:
first, it is abundantly clear that both the buttons and the text info are redundant if the "tag view" displays a tag a user has subscribed to. A simple check that can be made so a cleaner tag view can be presented for those tags that are frequently viewed by a particular user. A user is implied to have interest and know about the tags he is subscribed to, so there is no need to pollute the GUI with those buttons and the tag info.
second, for end users it is still possible to filter out that GUI element entirely, the watched and ignored tags are still trivial to manage from the right side bar, and the info button is still right there, rendering a much more appealing version:
box-shadow
property from.s-sidebarwidget
in the developer tools and the sidebar looks much cleaner that way.