@h_halvi Agree. For a professional designer who use it on a daily basis it's a no-brainer. But for me to pay $129 for a year of using it hmm I'm not sure. Though I don't mind to pay $129 and wait for a new major version. I can't explain why :)
Love this execution: through code, properties dialogue and visual display you get to build a better understanding of the relationship between what you see and how it's built: using whatever method you're most comfortable with. More than teaching designers to code, or developers to design, it gets to act as a translator between the two.
@tomfme I think so, but it is much friendlier than Xcode. The better these tools become, the smaller the gap between prototyping and development. Neonto is one to watch as well https://www.producthunt.com/tech...
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@armi2n@tomfme xCode has a steeper learning curve imo. I've been using framer for a while, this new update makes me super happy.
I think tools like this are great for allowing people to visualize how interface code is written/bridge the gap between designer and developer. Designers absolutely need to know how to write frontend/interface code--should be a job requirement, as it often is 🐔
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