5. Menu Interface

Advantages and Disadvantages
Advantages Disadvantages
Extremely easy to use. Someone who has never seen the interface before can work out what to do A poorly designed menu interface may be slow to use
There are no commands to learn or remember It can be irritating if there are too many menu screens to work through - users get annoyed or bored if it takes too long
Step-by-step options are given so that the user doesn't have to remember anything You often can't go to the exact place you want right at the start. You have to work your way through the menu screens even if you know where you want to get to.
Even if you don't know what to do, you can usually guess your way around the options The menu can take up a large part of the screen so you have to keep flicking back and forwards between applications
Menu interfaces don't have to be visual, they can be spoken - good for telephones or for visually impaired people If the menu is poorly designed it might be hard to read e.g. writing is too small for people with poor sight, colours might clash and be difficult to read, font style might be hard to read.
They don't need huge amounts of processing power or memory  
It is fairly easy for the software programmer to create the same menus in different languages  

Challenge see if you can find out one extra fact on this topic that we haven't already told you

Click on this link: Menu Driven Interface