Zoomable interfaces: Difference between revisions
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New page: {{{Quotation|Zoomable interfaces allow users access information by panning and zooming [646]. Space and scale are the fundamental means of organizing the information [282,646]. The mos... |
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{{Quotation|[[Zoomable interfaces]] allow users access information by panning and zooming [646]. Space and scale are the fundamental means of organizing the information [282,646]. The most common appearance of elements is [[Geometric Zoom|geometric zoom]], but there exist more complex ones as [[Semantic Zoom|semantic zooming]] [72,267,646], [[Constant Density Zooming|constant density zooming]] [911], or non-linear [[Pan|panning]] and [[Zoom|zooming]] [283,383]. Also, smoothness in zooming transitions have been studied: smooth zooms [72,316,853] and non-smooth zooms [646,734].|[Kerren et al., 2007]}} | |||
== References == | == References == |
Revision as of 16:54, 24 March 2010
Zoomable interfaces allow users access information by panning and zooming [646]. Space and scale are the fundamental means of organizing the information [282,646]. The most common appearance of elements is geometric zoom, but there exist more complex ones as semantic zooming [72,267,646], constant density zooming [911], or non-linear panning and zooming [283,383]. Also, smoothness in zooming transitions have been studied: smooth zooms [72,316,853] and non-smooth zooms [646,734].
[Kerren et al., 2007]
References
- [Kerren et al., 2007] Andreas Kerren, Achim Ebert, Jörg Meyer (Eds.): Human-Centered Visualization Environments, GI-Dagstuhl Research Seminar, Dagstuhl Castle, Germany, March 5-8, 2006, Revised Lectures. Lecture Notes in Computer Science 4417 Springer 2007, ISBN 978-3-540-71948-9, p. 27