By bloid
via alistapart.com
Submitted: May 06 / 09:34
Many believe that zebra stripes aid the reader by guiding the eye along the row. However, despite being in use in both paper and electronic mediums for almost half a century, there is practically no evidence that it actually assists users in this way. In June and July 2007, I conducted an extensive review of sources such as the International Association of Paper Historians, the Business and Forms Management Association, and the IEEE Annals of the History of Computing, but found absolutely no information on the origins of or rationale behind zebra striping.
Comments
amphi replied ago:
I also think that they don't really help that much, but I also think that they indeed look a bit better.
From my own experience I would say that the other rather fiddly techniques (column/row highlighting and sticky headers) actually do improve the throughput though. Especially with bigger datasets which require lots of scrolling/jumping.
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