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Revision as of 15:12, 26 June 2014

The 'swipe for action' pattern has not been applied in many apps so far, but it provides a nice and quick way to let the user choose an action he can directly perform on a certain item. The actions that are taken up should be the most important and obvious ones that can be performed on the item.

This pattern can exist in two forms. The first is explained in the wireframe: after swiping, the user can choose to perform an action by tapping on an icon. The second kind is when the action takes place directly after swiping over the item. The second set of screenshot examples show how this kind works. The user can swipe over the item in both directions. It is possible though, that the action that is performed after swiping is different in both directions.

Because of the contextual character of this pattern, you can also let a long press gesture instead of swiping, invoke the layer with actions.

The actions that can be called for on swipe, need to be contextual to the selected item, and cannot be global to the current screen. For that you should put actions in the options menu. Or, when the item was tapped and displayed on a detail page, actions can be added to a toolbar.

Instead of swipe for action, you could also use quick actions, or a context menu, but the latter is definitely less 'fun' or quick.

Relative Patterns


Swipe for action

iOS_Yummly

iOS_Evernote