Untitled Document

Toggle User Interface – Autodesk Inventor 2010

by sunithbabu on February 25, 2010

With the release of 2010 products from Autodesk, all the User Interface has changed its look and feel.

User interface design is important for several reasons.  First of all the more intuitive the user interface the easier it is to use, and the easier it is to use and the less expensive to use it.  The better the user interface the easier it is to train people to use it, reducing your training costs.  The better your user interface the less help people will need to use it, reducing your support costs.  The better your user interface the more your users will like to use it, increasing their satisfaction with the work that you have done.

UI Design Principles

Let’s start with the fundamentals of user interface design. Constantine and Lockwood describe a collection of principles for improving the quality of your user interface design. These principles are

  1. The structure principle. Your design should organize the user interface purposefully, in meaningful and useful ways based on clear, consistent models that are apparent and recognizable to users, putting related things together and separating unrelated things, differentiating dissimilar things and making similar things resemble one another. The structure principle is concerned with your overall user interface architecture.
  2. The simplicity principle. Your design should make simple, common tasks simple to do, communicating clearly and simply in the user’s own language, and providing good shortcuts that are meaningfully related to longer procedures.
  3. The visibility principle. Your design should keep all needed options and materials for a given task visible without distracting the user with extraneous or redundant information. Good designs don’t overwhelm users with too many alternatives or confuse them with unneeded information.
  4. The feedback principle. Your design should keep users informed of actions or interpretations, changes of state or condition, and errors or exceptions that are relevant and of interest to the user through clear, concise, and unambiguous language familiar to users.
  5. The tolerance principle. Your design should be flexible and tolerant, reducing the cost of mistakes and misuse by allowing undoing and redoing, while also preventing errors wherever possible by tolerating varied inputs and sequences and by interpreting all reasonable actions reasonable.
  6. The reuse principle. Your design should reuse internal and external components and behaviors, maintaining consistency with purpose rather than merely arbitrary consistency, thus reducing the need for users to rethink and remember.

Back to CAD, Autodesk Inventor 2010 has the option of changing the user interface between the old and the new.

Access User Interface

User Interface in Autodesk Inventor can be made to toggle between the old and new, by moving to:

Tools > Application Option > Colors Tab > Interface Style -

You can now toggle between the Classic and Ribbon User Interface. Hope this helps you to recall the old memories you had, when working with Autodesk Inventor 2009, 2008 . . .

You get a default message during the interface change as show below

Ribbon User Interface Layout for Autodesk Inventor 2010

Classic User Interface Layout for Autodesk Inventor 2010

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  • Haritha

    Your articles are excellent.

    I wish to read more from cadprofessor, a true blog name for learning students

  • sunithbabu

    “Approve”

  • BK

    I have been using Inventor 11 for quite a while now and I have an interview with a company that potentially has an older version. I wanted to get used the the old interface so I would be ready – thanks!

  • Anonymous

    Let me know which version the company is using ?



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