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J. Callahan, J. et al. “An Empirical Comparison of Pie vs. Linear Menus,” Proc.CHI 1988, ACM Press (1998), 95-100.

has been cited by the following article:

Article

A Zigzag Approach to Cascading Menus

1Department of Computer Science, State University of West Georgia, Georgia, USA

2Department of CSE/IT, University of Information Technology and Sciences, Dhaka, Bangladesh

3School of Science and Technology, Bangladesh Open University, Gazipur, Bangladesh


Journal of Computer Sciences and Applications. 2015, Vol. 3 No. 4, 94-99
DOI: 10.12691/jcsa-3-4-2
Copyright © 2015 Science and Education Publishing

Cite this paper:
Duane Yoder, Raihan Uddin Ahmed, Munsi Barkatullah, A. S. M Mahmudul Hasan. A Zigzag Approach to Cascading Menus. Journal of Computer Sciences and Applications. 2015; 3(4):94-99. doi: 10.12691/jcsa-3-4-2.

Correspondence to: A.  S. M Mahmudul Hasan, School of Science and Technology, Bangladesh Open University, Gazipur, Bangladesh. Email: apon_cse@yahoo.com

Abstract

The traditional cascading menu, commonly used in most desktop applications to traverse hierarchical menu systems, can be a time consuming and difficult task. In particular, the wider the submenu the more difficult it becomes to navigate the constraints of a menu item to reach the submenu. As a consequence, the submenu may disappear requiring additional attempts to attain the submenu. When a target menu items resides several layers deep, the required navigation can produce inefficient time and distance management. In this paper, we present an innovative cascading menu called the zigzag menu to address these issues. In the zigzag menu, submenus appear in alternating directions reducing the navigational distance to reach a submenu. A user study confirmed that a zigzag cascading menu effectively reduces the total mouse traversal required and decreases navigational time as familiarity with the system increases.

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