Previous Book Contents Book Index Next

Inside Macintosh: Mac OS 8 Human Interface Guidelines /
Chapter 2 - Control Guidelines


The Appearance Manager

Mac OS 8 introduces the Appearance Manager, which specifies how all Mac OS interface elements will appear. Appearance settings are selected through the Appearance control panel, shown in Figure 1-1.

Figure 1-1 Appearance control panel

Note the checkbox labeled "System-wide platinum appearance." This is an example of an important change in the Mac OS 8 human interface: users have direct control over the appearance of interface elements. To illustrate this, compare the Find File dialog box using platinum appearance (Figure 1-2) and the Find File dialog box on the same computer with platinum appearance turned off (Figure 1-3).

Figure 1-2 Find File dialog box under platinum appearance

Figure 1-3 Find File dialog box with platinum appearance turned off

Note the differences in buttons, pull-down menus, and window structure. This reveals a major change in the Mac OS human interface: since the Mac OS now provides for multiple appearances, there is no longer a direct correspondence between the appearance of Mac OS interface elements and their behavior.

You may find this change a bit startling at first, as it might seem to result in a less unified and coherent interface. Fortunately, there are two major facts which help prevent chaos:

  1. Toolbox-generated controls behave consistently acroll all appearance themes. A pop-up menu button, for example, displays the distinctive double arrow and behaves predictably under any theme.
  2. Control appearance is consistent within each theme.
The Mac OS 8 Toolbox provides an extended, enhanced suite of interface elements which make it easier to produce a consistent, attractive user interface. If you do these three things:

you will not only save yourself a significant amount of work, you will ensure that your application will be able to use the Appearance Manager to produce a coherent, rewarding user experience now and in the future.


Previous Book Contents Book Index Next

© Apple Computer, Inc.
18 JUL 1997