Skillquality 0.45

gestalt-ui-organisation

UI layout and grouping should follow Gestalt principles so users immediately understand which controls, commands, and elements belong together. Use when designing or reviewing component layout, navigation, toolbars, forms, dashboards, or any UI where visual grouping communicates

Price
free
Protocol
skill
Verified
no

What it does

Gestalt UI Organisation

UI should be organised so that the visual structure communicates relationships — which commands, controls, and elements belong together — without requiring users to read labels or documentation.

Core Gestalt Principles for UI Layout

1. Proximity

Elements that are close together are perceived as a group.

  • Place related controls (e.g. Bold / Italic / Underline) close together with minimal gap between them
  • Separate unrelated groups with larger whitespace
  • Do not use lines or borders as the primary grouping mechanism — proximity alone should convey the relationship

Example: A toolbar with [Cut] [Copy] [Paste] grouped tightly, then a wider gap before [Undo] [Redo], communicates two distinct command groups without any visual divider.

2. Similarity

Elements that look alike are perceived as related.

  • Use consistent colour, shape, size, and iconography within a functional group
  • Differentiate groups through visual contrast (shape, fill, size) — not just position
  • Primary actions and secondary actions should look visually distinct from each other

Example: Destructive actions (Delete, Remove) use a different colour than constructive actions (Save, Add), signalling different intent groups.

3. Common Region

Elements enclosed in a shared region are perceived as a group.

  • Use cards, panels, or background fills to enclose logically related content
  • Avoid wrapping unrelated elements in the same container
  • Nested regions should reflect nested logical hierarchy

Example: Form sections grouped in bordered cards signal that fields inside each card form a logical unit.

4. Connectedness

Elements connected by lines or visual links are perceived as related.

  • Use connectors, lines, or flow arrows only when a genuine relationship exists
  • In navigation trees or node-based editors, visible connections should match data relationships exactly

5. Figure / Ground

Users distinguish foreground interactive elements from background context.

  • Interactive controls should have sufficient contrast against their background
  • Disabled or contextual information should visually recede (lower contrast, smaller weight)
  • Modals and overlays must clearly separate from the underlying content layer

6. Continuity

The eye follows smooth paths and lines.

  • Align related controls along a consistent axis (left edge, baseline, or centre line)
  • Avoid breaking alignment within a logical group
  • Grid-aligned layouts reinforce groupings through shared axis continuity

Review Checklist

When reviewing a UI layout for Gestalt compliance:

  • Can a new user identify which controls belong together without reading labels?
  • Is proximity used as the primary grouping signal (not only borders/lines)?
  • Do visually similar elements share a functional purpose?
  • Are unrelated groups separated by meaningful whitespace?
  • Does visual hierarchy match interaction hierarchy (primary > secondary > tertiary)?
  • Are destructive or irreversible actions visually distinct from constructive ones?
  • Is the figure/ground contrast sufficient for all interactive elements?

Common Anti-Patterns

Anti-patternProblemFix
All buttons same size and colour regardless of functionSimilarity principle violated — implies all actions are equivalentDifferentiate primary, secondary, destructive visually
Related controls spread across distant areas of the screenProximity violated — user cannot perceive the relationshipCo-locate related controls
Overuse of divider lines to group elementsRelies on decoration rather than spatial logicUse whitespace and proximity instead
Identical whitespace between all elementsNo grouping signal — everything reads as a flat listApply 8pt/4pt spacing scale: tight within group, loose between groups
Mixed icon styles within one toolbarSimilarity broken — implies different functional familiesUse a single consistent icon set and weight per toolbar

Capabilities

skillsource-dembrandtskill-gestalt-ui-organisationtopic-accessibilitytopic-agent-skillstopic-claude-code-skillstopic-claude-skillstopic-cursor-skillstopic-design-systemtopic-design-tokenstopic-enterprise-uxtopic-gestalttopic-skills-shtopic-typographytopic-ui-design

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Quality

0.45/ 1.00

deterministic score 0.45 from registry signals: · indexed on github topic:agent-skills · 9 github stars · SKILL.md body (4,050 chars)

Provenance

Indexed fromgithub
Enriched2026-05-18 19:08:27Z · deterministic:skill-github:v1 · v1
First seen2026-05-18
Last seen2026-05-18

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