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Beyond Software Manuals and On-line Help: Interactive Help

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Software user guides have traditionally provided assistance when the user requested help. Context-sensitivity enabled help systems to predict the most appropriate topic to present. For Windows applications, the move from Microsoft WinHelp to the new Microsoft HTML Help format allows user instructions to be presented in the same window as the application. This offers technical authors some extraordinary opportunities to provide intelligent, predictive, interactive help without the user having to request it. In this paper, we will explore one of the first such interactive help systems (for the Archivist e-mail archiving software), and see where the technology is moving.

The evolution of help systems

When we think of help systems, we think of the online presentation of user-assistance information. Of course, the first help systems were user guides: traditional paper software manuals. The first electronic help systems may have been best described as help panels: short textual descriptions of the application's screens or fields. Typical of these early systems were displayed on IBM 3270 text terminals and invoked through the PF1 key.

Arguably the first help system that technical writers encountered as software application users was the online help for the Wang WP+ word processing software. This pre-PC help included a simple hypertext online manual and complementary context-sensitive help. The context-sensitivity permitted the help for the active field to be displayed, obviating the need for the user to find the relevant information (in theory!).

The first forms of diagnostic help appeared about this time. Diagnostic help appeared as a small program (an adjunct to the software application itself) that would guide the user through a series of questions to arrive at an instruction or solution. Such systems evolved into what we now know as Decision Support Systems.

IBM's Common User Access (CUA) initiative introduced the concept of standardised help formats for all compliant software applications. Microsoft Windows 3.0 took this further by providing a graphical hypertext viewer for online help, named WinHelp. The developments in online help technology since that time have principally been in the Windows environment.

The more recent innovations have been help experts or wizards, tool tips or bubble help, 'What's this?' point-and-click help, and natural language help. AnswerWorks, an add-on to WinHelp, now permits the user to ask for help orally (through voice recognition software).

The most recent innovation, easily implemented only in Windows 98 and NT5, is what may become known as Interactive Help. It is a form of help that doesn't wait to be asked before providing assistance.

Purpose of help

Like all forms of documentation, the needs of the reader (or user) should guide the design and delivery of the information.

The purpose of a help system is to help users use an application. This might mean:

  • helping the user overcome a problem,

  • helping the user understand a task,

  • helping the user make a decision, and/or

  • helping the user perform a task more efficiently.

A reader's perspective

Experience has shown that help users see online help as part of the software application, and not as something detached from it. They see help as an interruption, and they are often in a bad frame of mind when they get to the point of requesting help. (When all else fails...) Help is an interruption. Help is read out of necessity, and not out of desire. This last point identifies an important difference between online help and user guides.

Making help more helpful

If we set out to make existing help systems more useful, we would have to:

  • make them quicker to access;
  • keep them up-to-date automatically;
  • put the information in front of the user;
  • improve the context-sensitivity (make them more intuitive); and
  • integrate them further with the product.

These improvements would aim to minimise the interruption to the user, make information more accessible and more relevant, and reinforce the reader's perception of help as part of the application.

The Windows platform

Most help systems are written for Windows applications, and fortunately with WinHelp, Windows had the richest help engine of any operating system. The WinHelp technology, however, has now reached the end of its development cycle, and is being replaced by a new Microsoft help technology, known as HTML Help.

The US Department of Justice

The US Department of Justice has been pursuing Microsoft over what it believes are the company's breaches of anti-trust laws. Microsoft wants to integrate its Internet Explorer browser into the Windows user interface. Despite the legal action, Windows 98 was released with the browser so integrated. In fact, the user interface for Windows 98 was built with Dynamic HTML.

Internet Explorer components

Internet Explorer is no longer a separate application, but a series of Windows system components. The new HTML Help engine, HH.EXE, uses a number of these components. HH.EXE displays compiled HTML documents (.CHM files) in a cut-down browser (as illustrated below).

One of the Internet Explorer components is an ActiveX control called the WebBrowser control. ActiveX controls are programming objects that can be used by most Windows programming languages.

A programmer can add the hypertext browser as an object in an application, in the same way that other objects (such as drop-down lists and text-entry fields) are added.

Naturally, the browser control can display HTML-based help. The browser can also be programmed as part of the application, so that it can interact with other screen objects, and other screen objects can interact with it.

As the Internet Explorer components are part of the Windows 98 operating system (and the forthcoming Windows NT 5), the technical and installation problems for help author and programmer are minimised.

Help for Archivist

The help system for the HyperWrite Archivist e-mail archiving software comprises a CHM (compiled HTML Help) file which displays in a WebBrowser control in the same window as the Archivist application. The application interacts with the help, and vice versa. The help occupies one third of the application space, on the right of the application fields, as shown in the illustration, left.

The user can choose to "turn the help off" through a menu item. Archivist was developed in Visual Basic 5.0, while its help was developed with Virtual Media HDK.

Interactive help concepts

The benefits of "interactive help" are largely theoretical, but the concepts are well established.

Interaction between help and application

When the user moves to the Auto Update check box, the help for understanding this control is displayed automatically, without user intervention. This is the application controlling the help.

If the help text describes a particular screen button, clicking on a hypertext link in the help might cause that button in the application to flash or otherwise highlight itself. This is the help controlling the application.

These examples are simple enough to be coded by a script-literate technical author. It does not require specialised programming,. It is also low bandwidth -- help can be delivered without extra plug-ins, across the Internet.

This interactivity allows the author of the help system to add enormously to the functionality of the help, as well as making the experience of using the help more interesting.

Local and server-based content

As interactive help is currently HTML, seamless linking between local help content (stored on the user's hard disk) and more current content on the Internet or Intranet server is a natural by-product.

The benefits of automatic display of help

From the days of character-based applications up to the end of the VGA (640 x 480 pixel) monitor era, screen real-estate was a critical factor in help design. For most Windows applications, there was insufficient space on the screen to display the help and the application to which the text referred. Toggling between help and application was one option, and resizing windows and setting the help window to Always On Top was another. Both these options required the user to expend a considerable amount of effort for an average result.

A resolution of 800 x 600 is the most common screen format today, and this extra real estate is vital for a feasible system where help displays in the same window as the application. Devoting one third of the window to help allows sufficient space for simple help instructions.

Convergence theory

Rupert Murdoch, an Australian as well known in the UK as he is in Australia, is a believer in convergence theory. The theory says that telephone, television, computers, Internet, and newspapers are all merging into one medium.

One of Murdoch's Australian ventures is an organisation called FoxTel, which provides television, Internet and online newspaper classified services. A competing enterprise is NineMSN, a joint venture between the biggest television network in Australia and Microsoft.

Convergence is broadening the definition of a software application, and creating a new need for help for those applications. For example, what used to be a real estate classified advertisement section of the paper has become an Internet application that allows you to create a personalised home inspection schedule and customised map. The task of reading real estate ads is no longer intuitive; you have to understand how the Web-based application works. And therefore you need a help system.

Building Interactive Help for these applications of the future will become easier than the current situation for traditional executable-based applications.

Potential

The value of a new technology may best be seen by forecasting its potential. Interactive Help could cater for different user skill levels. In fact, the application could even automatically select the level of help to display based on the number of mistakes, or the speed, of the user.

If one of the purposes of help is to educate the user, help text could be "rotated", so that a different concept, example or tip is displayed when a user passes through a field.

Perhaps field validation (the testing of information the user has entered against rules for that field) may result not in an error message, but in a carefully delivered guide to the field's correct use.

Progressing further

Dynamic HTML, HTML Help and XML

The Microsoft WebBrowser control, being built around Internet Explorer, is compatible with Dynamic HTML (DHTML) and cascading style sheets (CSS). These two technologies provide a rich set of features for the document author.

Internet Explorer will soon support the emerging eXtensible Markup Language (XML) standard, and that support will automatically flow down into the WebBrowser. The author's investment in such help systems will therefore last a little way into the future, at least!

The compiled HTML format of Microsoft's HTML Help can also be used for Interactive Help, which will deliver the ultimate feature of help systems: the self-updating manual.

The self-updating manual

Microsoft has indicated that the .CHM format will soon take advantage of a self-updating feature currently used in Windows 98. This will permit the user to keep the CHM file locally (on his or her hard disk) like current help systems - but with a difference. When the CHM help file is opened while the user has a network connection, the CHM file will silently look for its "master" Web site.

It will then automatically check to see if the master has been amended. If so, it will download the changed pages, and iteratively compile them into the CHM file, replacing obsolete pages.

This feature will lift from the shoulders of technical authors the curse of the amendment. What more could an author ask of Interactive Help?

This article by Tony Self also appeared in Communicator, the journal of the Institute of Scientific and Technical Communicators (ISTC), http://www.istc.org.uk/site/members/interact.asp.

 

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