Usability discussions have moved to Groups.
http://groups.drupal.org/usability

Finding new posts in the forum - suggestion

Finding new posts within a long thread is a difficult thing on the drupal.org forums, but how about placing a "*" (or some other identifier) in front of the new post text i.e. "*new" it would then be much easier to do a local search (apple F on a mac not sure for a PC) to find new posts....

User Registration/Login Process

One of my personal peeves has always been the registration/login process which isn't very friendly for users with lower computer literacy. If you are running a site where you want to encourage these people to participate or they are part of your audience then this is a serious problem. Simple things like not allowing them to select their own password cause big problems and increase their frustration level with your site.

Mapping "taxonomy/term" to "taxonomy_menu"

When browsing or entering a URL with the following syntax:

http://acme.com/taxonomy_menu/2/4/6

the navigation menu will neatly expand and highlight the active term. However if opening a URL via the standard syntax:

http://acme.com/taxonomy/term/6/9

the menu will be (for obvious reasons) quite dead.

I am becoming crazy either

Hello , to have if to help with a problem .Finished the development me of a Web with drupal and I am finding problems, at the time of seeing itself well in all the navigators. I have errors of accessibility in the source code, the HTML. The problem, is not that nonencounter file HTML, to be able To correct the failures, I look for in the htdocs/drupal and nonencounter, none index.html nor node.html, that I can be making bad, I am becoming crazy either. A greeting and thank you very much.

Deleting users leaves ghost nodes

Deleting users leaves "n/a" ghost nodes that seem impossible to delete without going into the database.

Has this issue been solved?

Maybe it has, but searching on "n/a" within Drupal is impossible.

Why "," instead of "+" when displaying {taxonomy}

Greetings!

Why on earth is the {taxonomy} title on a page showing the terms with a comma in between even if the taxonomy URL reads: http://acme.com/taxonomy/term/6+5?

Out of curiosity: Could anyone please tell me why the "," (comma) character was chosen as the AND operator and the "+" (plus) character as the OR operator when combining terms? I will always feel it should be the other way around (due to my field of database experience, no doubt). :-)

Cheers!

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