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by motorest
541 days ago
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> Bootstrap and Sass are for the web. Cool, so we establish that the likes of Bootstrap and Sass already solve this problem for the web. > They don't solve the interop problem for Figma/Sketch/Framer That's irrelevant, isn't it? I mean, do you run apps straight out of Sigma/Sketch/Framer? Do you also think it's reasonable to call out Photoshop/Gimp/MSPaint? > iOS/macOS/Windows/Android/TVs/Watches/Fridges/Cars You're trying to refer to platforms/OSes, aren't you? Do you think it makes any sense to bundle everything together? Those who work on iOS/macOS/Windows/Android/TVs/Watches/Fridges/Cars would certainly look at you perplexed just for suggesting that specifying color schemes even registers as a concern in the whole cross-platform discussion. > |
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In a vacuum, sure. But products aren't all built in a web-centric vacuum.
> That's irrelevant, isn't it? I mean, do you run apps straight out of Sigma/Sketch/Framer? Do you also think it's reasonable to call out Photoshop/Gimp/MSPaint?
Figma/Sketch/Framer are design and prototyping tools. They are _very_ relevant in how we build products. The back-and-forth between design and engineering leads to better outcomes if both sides speak the same language, and their tools allow them to do so.
(Photoshop/Gimp/MSPaint aren't so relevant un product design)
> Do you think it makes any sense to bundle everything together?
Not everything. You generally want folks using your products across iOS, their car, their TV, and a web browser have a coherent experience. This doesn't mean that everything needs to look exactly the same. It means that key design decisions can be distributed across the board.