• calcopiritus@lemmy.world
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      11 months ago

      Toggle buttons are not normal buttons, they are toggles. Which have the same functionality as check boxes. They are a toggle between 2 states. The only difference is visual.

      If they toggle more than 2 states, (like a discrete slider), it is the same as a drop-down menu.

      Some widgets are the exact same as others, where the only difference is their visual representation.

      • Again you’re talking about switches. The thread is about normal buttons which have 2 states (the example being given is a button which can be a play button or a pause button depending on the current state). Buttons aren’t like check-boxes, switches are. A button triggers an event, check-boxes don’t. e.g. on a settings page, you tick all the check-boxes you want first, then click on the Save (or Cancel) changes button - one event for multiple changes. You don’t tick a check-box to start playing something, you press a play button (which in this case would then change into a pause button).

      • Mesa@programming.dev
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        11 months ago

        In my opinion, any button in terms of graphical UI design simply dispatches an action with no arguments regarding state. There doesn’t exist a dichotomy between a “toggle” mechanic and a “standard” button as far as the button itself is concerned.

        Whether or not you want to update the visual representation of that button is a separate concern.