“Group organization” is divided into the following three further steps.
Of these, “label spreading” is a task to spread pieces of paper on a desk. I already explained it in (5.2.1) Spread so that you can see the whole at a glance.
“Label gathering” is a task of moving pieces closer to what is likely to be related and creating groups. I briefly introduced it, but I explain it in detail later.
Finally, we make “nameplate.” After we create groups, we bundle multiple pieces of paper into one pile. Then we attach a “nameplate” which explains pieces in the group.
For example, suppose you have 100 pieces at the beginning. After you make groups, which have 3 to 5 pieces per group, bundling them reduces the number of objects to about 25. It goes to a more manageable quantity.
Nameplates are the explanation of pieces in a group. It is to extract only the important part of “too much information.” It is related to (1.4.3.2) Hide non-critical parts = Extract important parts. The process is a kind of abstraction.
For these 25 piles, you repeat the label gathering again. Then it goes 6 to 7 piles. By repeating this process, “too much information” finally goes into a few piles. Now you can roughly understand the overview of 100 pieces which you wrote. It is a process to grasp the whole picture.
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