If a client wants us to implement a bad UX, its our professional duty to help him make an informed decision on that. To say, "we don't have customers who have an issue with that" actually means "those who have an issue with that are not our customers".
I would just advise them to add a small sticky indicator that there is more content below the fold and then hide the scrollbar as a fix to the UX issue, like I mentioned before. That may not be neccessary in every case, but in the one you showed, it would be rather useful.
Maybe some light inset shadow with js? Or a very thin scrollbar using pseudo selectors...
Or clip some content in such a way that the user would know there's scrollable content...
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If a client wants us to implement a bad UX, its our professional duty to help him make an informed decision on that. To say, "we don't have customers who have an issue with that" actually means "those who have an issue with that are not our customers".
Well there is bad UX and just ugly default browser shit
I really don't feel bad hiding a scrollbar for a side menu that is a mere 50px wide.
If they asked me to remove the general scrollbar, agreed.
I would just advise them to add a small sticky indicator that there is more content below the fold and then hide the scrollbar as a fix to the UX issue, like I mentioned before. That may not be neccessary in every case, but in the one you showed, it would be rather useful.
Maybe some light inset shadow with js? Or a very thin scrollbar using pseudo selectors...
Or clip some content in such a way that the user would know there's scrollable content...