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Tagged “fluid”

Getting started with Utopia Figma Plugins (Utopia Blog)

Here’s another tool from the Utopia creators to assist with breakpoint-free fluid responsive design.

Until now, the tooling for Utopia has been predominantly developer-focused, but we know that's only half the story. To start to address this, we've created a pair of Figma plugins to help designers set out Utopian project foundations.

I also really like the idea of having three sets of type styles at both defined viewport sizes.

We typically use a Strong style for headings and other text that we want to visually punctuate our designs. The Prose style is useful for longer-form text which might benefit from a larger, more relaxed line height. The Default style is a catch-all for other snippets of text in our designs, like a standlone link, a short piece of explainer text, or perhaps an image caption. The number and variety of styles required will vary depending on your design's purpose and style but these three serve as a reasonable starting point.

Min-Max clamp calculator, by 9elements

Here’s a handy tool from the smart folks at 9elements for making a value – such as a font-size, or margin – fluidly responsive. In their words the tool…

calculates the CSS clamp formula to interpolate between two values in a given viewport range.

It’s inspired by Utopia but is for situations when you only need a single clamp formula rather than one for each interval in a type or spacing scale.

Beyond that, the website for this tool just looks great and is choc-full of tricks. It uses some snazzy CSS, includes Zach Leatherman’s details-utils web component for animated disclosures and is made with Astro, Svelte and PostCSS.

A Dao of Web Design (on A List Apart)

John Allsopp’s classic article in which he looks at the medium of web design through the prism of the Tao Te Ching, and encourages us to embrace the web’s inherent flexibility and fluidity.

It’s time to throw out the rituals of the printed page, and to engage the medium of the web and its own nature.

It’s choc-full of quotable lines, but here are a few of my favourites:

We must “accept the ebb and flow of things.”

Everything I’ve said so far could be summarized as: make pages which are adaptable.

…and…

The web’s greatest strength, I believe, is often seen as a limitation, as a defect. It is the nature of the web to be flexible, and it should be our role as designers and developers to embrace this flexibility, and produce pages which, by being flexible, are accessible to all. The journey begins by letting go of control, and becoming flexible.

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