I’ve seen Figma provide CSS values but I think it’s main purpose is designers can use it to create UX specs that devs can then implement. It’s definitely more convenient to make mocks in than using HTML and CSS directly. It also seems more popular than the Adobe option but it’s also super not free
Agreed. The problem is that their customers are non-technical PMs, and their sales material acts like they offer copy/paste code generation. The PMs then expect to get their money’s worth by cutting dev time in half, and they aren’t going to blame their own decision when that doesn’t happen.
I’ve seen Figma provide CSS values but I think it’s main purpose is designers can use it to create UX specs that devs can then implement. It’s definitely more convenient to make mocks in than using HTML and CSS directly. It also seems more popular than the Adobe option but it’s also super not free
Agreed. The problem is that their customers are non-technical PMs, and their sales material acts like they offer copy/paste code generation. The PMs then expect to get their money’s worth by cutting dev time in half, and they aren’t going to blame their own decision when that doesn’t happen.