-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 4
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
Horizontal Bar Chart #176
Comments
Thanks Asier. This is now on our backlog, and we'll prioritise it against our other backlog items. Best, Jon. |
Thanks Jon :)
--
Asier de Quadra | Interaction Designer
@asier.dequadra
CDIO - Digital Delivery Centre Newcastle | Room BP9001 | Benton Park View |
Newcastle Upon Tyne | NE99 1ZZ
…On Mon, 14 Nov 2022 at 09:14, Jon-Rowe-HMRC ***@***.***> wrote:
Thanks Asier. This is now on our backlog, and we'll prioritise it against
our other backlog items. Best, Jon.
—
Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub
<#176 (comment)>,
or unsubscribe
<https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AJA7JXQSRGL7KCZFCNH77PDWIH7HBANCNFSM6AAAAAAR5YLHZA>
.
You are receiving this because you authored the thread.Message ID:
***@***.***>
|
Hi Jon, is there any progress with this pattern? It has been over 7 months since I submitted it and it is not in the backlog yet! Anything holding it back? |
Hi Asier, It's been on our private team backlog. It can only be on our public pattern backlog if our working group votes for it be added. But this isn't the holdup. There's 3 things delaying it:
You could try to publish it via GDS, who have a much larger team and if published cross-gov that would be a better outcome. J |
Well, I am so glad I've asked about it now and not years later. |
Maybe this GDS thread would be the best to add to alphagov/govuk-design-system-backlog#16 It's been on their backlog for 5 years, so more posts there would probably help prioritise the pattern. There has been some recent activity. |
Name of component or pattern
Horizontal bar chart
Name of your service
Annual Tax Summary (ATS) -- within Personal Tax Account
Overview
The pattern helps sighted users understand quantitative data by adding a complementary visualisation layer of information.
View screenshot to proposed pattern
Is it useful and unique?
Usefulness
This pattern aims to integrate a bar chart into existing GOV.UK Table/DL-type layout.
Numerical data in tabular format provides detail and accuracy to information, but it can be cognitively demanding specially to non-expert users. Numerical information alone involves a degree of mental mathematical calculation to be able to interpret and evaluate.
The bar chart helps users evaluate and compare quantities intuitively. It adds an additional dimension to numerical data that helps grasp the whole and get to the gist of the information.
The proposed pattern offers two complementary modes of reading in a single layout -- table and graph. One mode supplements the other without interfering with each other. The user is able to access both separately or in combination, depending on their needs and cognitive preference.
Examples of possible useful applications:
Uniqueness
It is unique in GDS as there is no exiting component that graphically communicates quantitative data.
Assistive technology
The bars assist sighted users only. The bars are 'visually-hidden' and not described by screen-readers. The data is universally accessible via the content.
Other components or patterns you've tried
There are no existing pattern/components. The previous existing live implementation of these bar charts were too cumbersome and distracting for reading the data -- especially in small screen devices.
View screenshot of mobile views of previous implementation versus proposed pattern.
Reuse of existing GDS component
2px
thick for a stronger presence next to the bar.govuk-colour("turquoise")
but any other GOVUK colour could be used keeping within WCAG colour contrast guidelines.Research on this pattern
UR sessions on ATS service with 6 participants. October 2022
External literature research on bar charts comprehension
Review of Graph Comprehension Research: Implications for Instruction. Shah and Hoeffner, 2002. Educational Psychology Review, Vol. 14, No. 1, March 2002. PDF
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: