vote up 3 vote down star

Duplicate:

Do you Log In, Log On, Sign In or Sign On?

I'm creating a web site and now need to make a tough decision.

Log or Sign?

In and Out or On and Off?

One word or two?

Caps or lowercase?

I think these are all my choices:

  • Log In / Log Out
  • Log On / Log Off
  • LogIn / LogOut
  • LogOn / LogOff
  • Login / Logout
  • Logon / Logoff
  • Sign In / Sign Out
  • Sign On / Sign Off
  • SignIn / SignOut
  • SignOn / SignOff
  • Signin / Signout
  • Signon / Signoff

How should I choose? What do other applications or web sites use?

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Voted to close: "subjective and argumentative". – Andrew Hare Apr 10 at 17:34
It’s a duplicate. See “Related” on the right side. – Gumbo Apr 10 at 17:34
Not really programming related ... – driis Apr 10 at 17:34
Not programming related??!?! WTF? – Zack Peterson Apr 10 at 17:36
I'm not sure why you're trying to re-open it given that it's a duplicate. – George Stocker Apr 10 at 17:40
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closed as exact duplicate by Neil Butterworth, Andrew Hare, Gumbo, dirkgently, Bill the Lizard Apr 10 at 17:37

3 Answers

vote up 7 vote down

Google uses Sign in / Sign out. And of course everybody wants to be like Google.

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beat me to it :) – cobbal Apr 10 at 17:36
vote up 2 vote down

All of these are commonly used and should be understood by all. I'd look at the other sites your target audience uses -- and use the same conventions the majority of those use.

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vote up 2 vote down

New trend (RECOMMENDED):

Sign In | Sign Out | Join Now!

Google, Yahoo, Microsoft follow it now...

or an old proved practice:

Login | Logout | Register

Which is more popular

See also:

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