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jaffathecake | 8 months ago

Fwiw this technique is covered in the article, with an example, and the UX issues are discussed.

The simpler solutions presented do not have these issues.

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JadeNB|8 months ago

You are right, thanks. Ironically, I didn't realize that because I only read the text:

> If the footnote markers are links, then the user can use the back button/gesture to return to the main content. But, even though this restores the previous scroll position, the user is still left with the challenge of finding their previous place in a wall of text^6.

and didn't read footnote 6, which mentions the technique I'm describing. But I still don't seem to see the UX issues, other than the mention of a teeny-weeny hit target, which I admit is perfectly legitimate. But I am an academic, so it is probably no surprise that imitating academia appeals to me.

jaffathecake|8 months ago

The other issue is the poor link text (a superscript number) which gives no clue as to the content at the other end of the link. Like I said, it just becomes a test of your curiosity. Whereas the other examples have headings relevant to the content.