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Breadcrumb navigation
Navigational aid in user interfaces
Navigational aid in user interfaces

A breadcrumb or breadcrumb trail is a graphical control element used as a navigational aid in user interfaces and on web pages. It allows users to keep track and maintain awareness of their locations within programs, documents, or websites. The term alludes to the trail of bread crumbs left by Hansel and Gretel in the German fairy tale.
Usage
A breadcrumb trail tracks and displays each page viewed by a visitor of a website, either in the order the pages were viewed, or in other definitions, displaying a hierarchy of the current page in relation to the website's structure. Breadcrumbs are typically placed in horizontal form under the masthead or navigation of a website.
They may be implemented with each part of the trail having a drop-down menu of its own, as well as drag and drop support, as done in Windows Explorer.
Websites
Breadcrumbs typically appear horizontally across the top of a web page, often below title bars or headers. They provide links back to each previous page the user navigated through to get to the current page or—in hierarchical site structures—the parent pages of the current one. Breadcrumbs provide a trail for the user to follow back to the starting or entry point. A greater-than sign () often serves as a hierarchy separator, although designers may use other glyphs (such as » or ›), as well as various graphical icons.
A breadcrumb trail or path based on viewing history is typically rendered as follows:
For instance, in this scenario, a website visitor views seven pages (note how the pages are tracked in the order the user viewed them):
Typical breadcrumbs following a hierarchical structure are shown as follows:
Software
Current file managers including Linux Mint's Nemo, Windows Explorer (from Windows Vista onwards), Finder (for Macintosh operating systems), GNOME's Nautilus, KDE's Dolphin, Xfce's Thunar, MATE's Caja, and SnowBird allow breadcrumb navigation, often replacing or extending an address bar.
Types
There are three types of web breadcrumbs:
- Location: location breadcrumbs are static and show where the page is located in the website hierarchy.
- Attribute: attribute breadcrumbs give information that categorizes the current page.
- Path: path breadcrumbs show users the steps they took to end up on current page.
Usability
Location breadcrumbs are not necessarily appropriate for sites whose content is so rich that single categories do not fully describe a particular piece of content. For this reason, a tag may be more appropriate, though breadcrumbs can still be used to allow the user to retrace their steps and see how they arrived at the current page.
Other names
References
References
- (27 April 2018). "Breadcrumb Navigation {{!}} Spidergems".
- Demetri. (4 June 2012). "16 Important Do's and Don'ts of Effective Web Design". Design Toronto Web.
- Martini, Brands. (October 26, 2018). "Everything You Need To Know About Breadcrumbs".
- (17 March 2009). "Breadcrumbs In Web Design: Examples And Best Practices".
- (28 September 2016). "Breadcrumb Navigation: Good for Website Usability or Not?".
- ''Managing Windows® with VBScript and WMI'' by Don Jones Published 2004 Addison-Wesley Professional ISBN 0-321-21334-3
- Gouvernement, Service d'Information du. "Fil d'Ariane - Breadcrumb - Système de Design de l'État".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
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