#HOVER CURSORS SOFTWARE#
If even many richly formatted applications (like games and some high-end office software which customised UI features beyond the OSs' standard) used arrows here, why wouldn't a relatively boring thing like a web page, which is just some black on grey text with some blue bits and maybe a few images floating to one side or the other? It would also be a bit weird to have anything other than normal OS behaviour at the time, since it would mean that web-browsers were acting strangely compared to other programs. That was fine as within the relatively limited range of features one could have in a web page at the time went, they were obviously buttons and obviously clickable. As the OSs put arrow cursors on such widgets, they had arrow cursors. Like the other types of they were implemented through the mechanisms the OSs had for standard widgets and would have standard buttons. It was some time before gave buttons when the type was submit or reset. It was still relatively weak as a physical signal so the hand-shaped cursor was invented as a further indication. When hypertext (of which the web isn't the first example, but was the killer app that brought it to a wide audience) emerged the clickable bits of text were indicated through underlining and (when colour was available) different colours to the non-linked text. Mostly the fact that they looked a bit like physical buttons sufficed to indicate that they were clickable. When the cursor was over them they got the default cursor that indicated that while it may be possible to click or double-click whatever was under the cursor, they couldn't be typed in, and nor were they the dragging edge of a resizable object. Indeed since you could be clicking a physical button on the mouse to do so (assuming you weren't tabbing on the keyboard to navigate), the skeuomorphism was backed up by that physical action. They had a shadowing effect to give a skeuomorphic impression of their being akin to physical buttons, which served to indicate they could be clicked much as one would push such a physical button. It's worth considering the historical order in which these things came into being.īuttons existed from very early in the days of GUI computing.