How to prototype and test your prototype within seconds
How to use the repeat grid to create fast, repeating columns and/or rows How to apply text and color style presets and change on the fly How to convert icons and buttons into symbols to reuse across your entire project How to design icons using the pen tool and boolean effects How to make your artboards responsive using auto-resize How to set up artboards to rapidly assemble wireframes How to navigate around the interface and toggle on/off the panels you wish to use This course starts off with Adobe XD basics and quickly gets up to speed on designing and prototyping a full-fledged app with amazing images, colors, and animations. There also will be more third-party integration with tools like Zeplin and Sympli soon, as well as the ability to publish design specs.Adobe XD is a powerful tool for UI/UX designers giving you the power to design and prototype an entire app, all from one program. Specifically, though, the company says that it will continue to focus on core tools to add features like JPG export and support for layout grids, for example. “We’re looking for all those places where friction exists and the designer has to do time working on things that don’t relate to the core strengths of a designer,” he told me - and that’s the guiding philosophy for the continued development of XD, too. Looking ahead, Guzman says that its team isn’t done yet. The team also used this time to improve the overall speed of the application, which is something Guzman mentioned a number of times during our call and which gives the app a very fluid feel. That meant making it easier to working with repeating colors, symbols or patterns, for example, but also adding an annotation feature in addition to the existing commenting feature for team collaboration. Over the course of the beta test, the company closely listened to feedback and added numerous features and made lots of changes to XD. “XD is a UX/UI solution for designers who want to start their day with an application and hang their hat on it at the end of the day,” Guzman joked. And when they are done, they can easily export their assets for production use. So with XD, designers can now easily wireframe their solutions, create low- or high-fidelity designs and easily transition between their artboards and interactive prototypes. “It’s actually about working with people and failing fast and early.” So that’s what Adobe focused on in developing XD: building the tools that ensure that designers can spend their time designing and not worry about wasting their time on replicating things for multiple resolutions, for example. “Being a designer in today’s modern environment is actually less about just creating the aesthetics of visual design or the workflows that a UX designer might be tasked with or the interactions that a UI designer would be focused on,” Guzman noted. XD (which was previously known as the Adobe Experience Design tool) has now hit its 1.0 release, as the company announced at its annual MAX conference today.Īs Adobe group product manager for XD Cisco Guzman told me, “XD is all about designing at the speed of thought.” With over one million downloads, XD clearly hit a nerve in the industry and a number of companies already adopted it as a core tool even during the beta.
The company started testing this application back in 2016 today, it’s finally coming out of beta.
XD is Adobe’s tool for helping user experience and user interface designers prototype and wireframe new mobile and web applications.