Drag and drop
In computer graphical user interfaces, drag and drop is a pointing device gesture in which the user selects a virtual object by "grabbing" it and dragging it to a different location or onto another virtual object. In general, it can be used to invoke many kinds of actions, or create various types of associations between two abstract objects.
As a feature, drag-and-drop support is not found in all software, though it is sometimes a fast and easy-to-learn technique. However, it is not always clear to users that an item can be dragged and dropped, or what is the command performed by the drag and drop, which can decrease usability.[1]
Actions
The basic sequence involved in drag and drop is:
- Move the pointer to the object
- Press, and hold down, the button on the mouse or other pointing device, to "grab" the object
- "Drag" the object to the desired location by moving the pointer to this one
- "Drop" the object by releasing the button
Dragging requires more physical effort than moving the same pointing device without holding down any buttons. Because of this, a user cannot move as quickly and precisely while dragging (see Fitts' law). However, drag-and-drop operations have the advantage of thoughtfully chunking together two operands (the object to drag, and the drop location) into a single action.[2] Extended dragging and dropping (as in graphic design) can stress the mousing hand.
A design problem appears when the same button selects and drags items. Imprecise movement can cause a dragging when the user just wants to select.
Another problem is that the target of the dropping can be hidden under other objects. The user would have to stop the dragging, make both the source and the target visible and start again. In classic Mac OS the top-of-screen menu bar served as a universal "drag cancel" target. This issue has been dealt with in Mac OS X with the introduction of Exposé.
In Mac OS
Drag and drop, called click and drag at the time, was used in the original Macintosh to manipulate files (for example, copying them between disks[3] or folders.[4]). System 7 added the ability to open a document in an application by dropping the document icon onto the application's icon.
In System 7.5, drag and drop was extended to common clipboard operations like copying or moving textual content within a document. Content could also be dragged into the filesystem to create a "clipping file" which could then be stored and reused.
For most of its history Mac OS has used a single button mouse with the button covering a large portion of the top surface of the mouse. This may mitigate the ergonomic concerns of keeping the button pressed while dragging.
In OS/2
The Workplace Shell of OS/2 uses dragging and dropping extensively with the secondary mouse button, leaving the primary one for selection and clicking. Its use like that of other advanced Common User Access features distinguished native OS/2 applications from platform-independent ports.
In HTML
The HTML5 working draft specification includes support for drag & drop.[5] HTML5 supports different kinds of dragging and dropping features including:
- Drag and Drop texts and HTML codes
- Drag and Drop HTML elements
- Drag and Drop files
Based on needed action, one of the above types can be used. Note that when an HTML element is dragged for moving its current position, its ID is sent to the destination parent element; so it sends a text and can be considered as the first group.
Google's web-based e-mail application Gmail supports drag-and-drop of images and attachments in the latest Google Chrome browser and Apple's Safari (5.x). And Google Image search supports drag & drop.
On a touch screen
Touch screen interfaces also include drag and drop, or more precisely, long press, and then drag, e.g. on the iPhone or Android home screens.
In end-user programming
Drag and drop is considered an important program construction approach in many end-user development systems. In contrast to more traditional, text-based programming languages, many end-user programming languages are based on visual components such as tiles or icons that are manipulated by end users through drag-and-drop interfaces. AgentSheets introduced drag and drop programming by creating drag- and drop-able program components such as conditions, actions, rules and methods that could be assembled by end-users into complete programs. Drag and drop is also featured in many shader editing programs for graphics tools, such as Blender.[6] Drag and drop also features in some video game engines, including Unreal Engine, GameMaker: Studio, Construct 2 and, with expansion, Unity (game engine).
Examples
A common example is dragging an icon on a virtual desktop to a special trashcan icon to delete a file.
Further examples include:
- Dragging a data file onto a program icon or window for viewing or processing. For instance, dropping an icon that represents a text file into a Microsoft Word window signifies "Open this document as a new document in Word"
- Moving or copying files to a new location/directory/folder,
- Adding objects to a list of objects to be processed,
- Rearranging widgets in a graphical user interface to customize their layout,
- Dragging an attribute onto an object to which the command is to be applied,
- e.g. dragging a color onto a graphical object to change its color,
- Dragging a tool to a canvas location to apply the tool at that location,
- Creating a hyperlink from one location or word to another location or document.
- Most word processors allow dragging selected text from one point to another.
- Dragging a series of codeblocks such as in Blender for designing shaders and materials.
References
- ↑ Jakob Nielsen, "Top-10 Application-Design Mistakes," http://www.useit.com/alertbox/application-mistakes.html (19 February 2008).
- ↑ Buxton, W. (1986). "Chunking and Phrasing and the Design of Human-Computer Dialogues". Proceedings of the IFIP World Computer Congress. pp. 475–480.
- ↑ "Disk Swapper's Elbow". folklore.org.
- ↑ "The Grand Unified Model (2): The Finder". folklore.org.
- ↑ "HTML5 W3C Working Draft". w3.org.
- ↑ "Render — Blender Reference Manual". blender.org.