Joey, do u mean flickable?
2013/5/31 Joey Chan <qqwor...@gmail.com> > Thanks for sharing :) > > Next step I will try not to use listview to display those content, because > listview is not "random" enough :P > > > 2013/5/31 Lisette Slegers <lisette.sleg...@canonical.com> > >> Thanks! :) Ping me if you want a re-cap of anything. >> >> Joey shared a great looking prototype on his screen with us, that is what >> I was talking about. >> >> Thanks, >> Lisette >> >> >> On Fri, May 31, 2013 at 4:49 PM, Roman Shchekin <mrqt...@gmail.com>wrote: >> >>> Looks great! >>> Someone now must develop a prototype? >>> >>> P.S. sorry, I again missed our meeting due to work :( >>> >>> >>> 2013/5/31 Lisette Slegers <lisette.sleg...@canonical.com> >>> >>>> Hi! As we discussed in the RSS Reader hangout today, here is an >>>> example of an organic grid. Consider this a wireframe and a tool to >>>> prototype and try different approaches, not a final visual design: >>>> >>>> >>>> https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1S4uK3ajc5WoYwZXIpUsxD0rw5r40aVK-NcbUHJwzVwY/edit?usp=sharing >>>> >>>> I have switched off comments for this doc, so that we can keep track of >>>> all comments in this mailing list instead. >>>> >>>> The example image is at the top, and the same image with a visible grid >>>> and the item size in grid units right underneath. There are items in 3 >>>> different sizes, and each size has several variations. >>>> >>>> For the first one, 21x14, you see the four possible variations of any >>>> item consisting of text and image. The other ones only show one of the four >>>> variations. There are also items that contain only text (we probably need >>>> text-only items for all sizes to accommodate articles without images). All >>>> items have one grid unit space between the text and image. >>>> >>>> As for distributing items on the grid, we could explore 2 options. >>>> >>>> Option 1 is to distribute items on the page roughly as they are >>>> distributed in the example, and assign the appropriate item size and >>>> variation dynamically and depending on the text / images that appear in the >>>> article. As you can see, the 'end' of the grid example fits with the >>>> 'beginning', so we can build a never ending grid that is as long as we need >>>> it to be. It can also start at any point to make it look less repetitive. >>>> >>>> Option 2 is to randomly distribute the items on the page. This is more >>>> organic in principal (and might use the screen space in the most efficient >>>> way), but we need to try if it results in readable and beautiful layouts. >>>> >>>> As we discussed just now, option 1 is quicker to implement and will >>>> allow us to test the grid with real content sooner. >>>> >>>> Another thing to consider: what happens if the topic is refreshed and >>>> new items are added to the page? If a user has been reading a topic, and >>>> new items are added, it would be disruptive to find that the existing items >>>> have moved, so once an item has been placed on the page, it should stay >>>> there. >>>> >>>> Let's see if this works with real content; can't wait to see more of >>>> those awesome prototypes! :) >>>> >>>> Lisette >>>> >>>> -- >>>> Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~ubuntu-touch-coreapps >>>> Post to : ubuntu-touch-corea...@lists.launchpad.net >>>> Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~ubuntu-touch-coreapps >>>> More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp >>>> >>>> >>> >> >> -- >> Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~ubuntu-phone >> Post to : ubuntu-phone@lists.launchpad.net >> Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~ubuntu-phone >> More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp >> >> >
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