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User Documentation. CIS 375 Bruce R. Maxim UM-Dearborn. System Delivery. Training Documentation Likely User Audience Users Operators. Printed Documentation. Alphabetic command lists Quick reference cards Brief getting started notes Novice user tutorials Conversion manuals
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User Documentation CIS 375 Bruce R. Maxim UM-Dearborn
System Delivery • Training • Documentation • Likely User Audience • Users • Operators
Printed Documentation • Alphabetic command lists • Quick reference cards • Brief getting started notes • Novice user tutorials • Conversion manuals • Detailed reference manuals
On-Line Documentation • Man pages • Help facility • Tutorials • Demonstration
Common Documentation Problems • Simply presents operator descriptions • Organized according to system functions, not user goals • Too much for novice users to take in • Rarely presents complete methods explicitly • Talks about how system works, not how it can be used • User must problem solve even simple tasks • Rarely presents selection rules
Printed Manual Guidelines • Let user's task guide organization • Let user learning process shape sequencing • Present semantics before syntax • Keep writing style clean and simple • Show numerous examples • Offer meaningful and complete sample sessions • Draw transition diagrams • Use advance organizers and summaries • Provide table of contents, indices, and glossaries • Include list of error messages • Give credit to all project participants
Process for Developing Print Manuals • Use professional writers and copy editors • Prepare user manuals before implementation • Review drafts thoroughly • Field test early drafts • Provide feedback mechanism to readers • Revise to reflect changes regularly
On-Line Manuals • Can provide successively more detailed error explanations • Personalized instruction on system use is possible • Examples of correct commands • Descriptions of current system parameters • Lists of commands • News for system users • List of available user aids
Advantages of On-Line Manuals • Information is available when computer is available • User don’t need space to open printed manuals • Manual updates are low cost • Electronic indexing allow fast search of manual • Multimedia help may be beneficial
Disadvantages of On-Line Manuals • Displays may not be as easy to read as print manuals • Each screen contains less info than 1 printed page • Interface operations may confuse novices • Splitting display among work, help, and tutorials leaves less useful screen space • Additional burden on user
Why is it harder to read text on computer screens? • Poor fonts • Low contrast between characters and backgrounds • Emitted light rather than reflected • Small displays require frequent page turning • Display placement too high • Layout and formatting problems • Reduced body motion make them more fatiguing • Displays are less familiar than books