Web Tasks Patterns – How Top Apps Use Them

Explore how leading web apps implement the Tasks component. Every example is captured inside a real user flow from a top SaaS or consumer product, so you see the element in context, not isolated.

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The Tasks Component in Web Interfaces

The Tasks is a workhorse component in modern web design — used constantly, often customized heavily, and a frequent source of UX debate. This page collects real Tasks implementations from the Page Flows web library, letting you compare how leading brands solve the same design problem in production.

Why Tasks in Context Beats Isolated Mockups

Seeing Tasks inside a full flow reveals design decisions that static mockups miss: when the element appears, what data it shows, how it behaves on hover or focus, how it adapts to different contexts. These are the details that determine whether your own Tasks implementation feels polished or rough.

A Reference for Component Libraries and Design Systems

For designers building component libraries, PMs scoping new features, and researchers documenting patterns, this is a browsable reference library of Tasks in the wild. Each example is tagged by brand and category, so you can find the specific reference you need in seconds.

Frequently Asked Questions

What counts as a Tasks in the web library?

The Tasks category includes implementations across many web apps, from simple conventional designs to heavily customized variants used by design-forward brands.

Can I see how Tasks works across different product types?

Yes. Tasks appears in SaaS dashboards, e-commerce sites, consumer apps, and more — each tagged by brand and category so you can study cross-industry and within-industry patterns.

Are Tasks examples shown within full flows or as isolated components?

Always in context. Each Tasks is tagged within a complete user flow, so you see exactly when and how it's used rather than a decontextualized mockup.

Can I copy the code for these Tasks implementations?

No. The library is for design research — you study the patterns and apply the ideas to your own implementation, but code isn't provided.