Hope you like the video:
One word, DAMN!
Honestly this is what I want to continue doing in the future, I absolutely loved the guide!
I've also taken a look on your channel, and I am seriously impressed by how talented you really are, if there's anything i like It's webbdesigning. I'll be sure to subscribe and learn alot more from you so that someday I might work on designing websites ! :)
One word, DAMN!
Honestly this is what I want to continue doing in the future, I absolutely loved the guide!
I've also taken a look on your channel, and I am seriously impressed by how talented you really are, if there's anything i like It's webbdesigning. I'll be sure to subscribe and learn alot more from you so that someday I might work on designing websites ! :)
Thank you for the compliments, really appreciate it.
I never realized it's hard to make videos, because I do struggle, but im trying.
yes absoutely webdesigning is great, also app design is sick. All in all, this is UI Design.
Thank you for the compliments, really appreciate it.
I never realized it's hard to make videos, because I do struggle, but im trying.
yes absoutely webdesigning is great, also app design is sick. All in all, this is UI Design.
Do you think it would be possible to do a UI-design but not actually code in things such as making a side-menu redirect you to different articles etc but to make and sell the design itself? Or is the market more directed towards both making the design and coding everything manually yourself?
Do you think it would be possible to do a UI-design but not actually code in things such as making a side-menu redirect you to different articles etc but to make and sell the design itself? Or is the market more directed towards both making the design and coding everything manually yourself?
In the industry you can get hired as a UI Designer or a UX Designer who purely focuses on designing, prototyping, user research, etc... but I think it will also be easier to find a job if you can demonstrate front-end development skills. Designers with front-end development skills will help allot.
Hence why my university course is heavily front-end based at the moment, they don't teach design, only coding. But I was previously studying Graphics so I got the necessary skillsets.
In the industry you can get hired as a UI Designer or a UX Designer who purely focuses on designing, prototyping, user research, etc... but I think it will also be easier to find a job if you can demonstrate front-end development skills. Designers with front-end development skills will help allot.
Hence why my university course is heavily front-end based at the moment, they don't teach design, only coding. But I was previously studying Graphics so I got the necessary skillsets.
I've been practicing Html & CSS coding a little bit for over 6 months now, don't go to school for it. I know how to add things like side-menu's, redirection towards other sites etc. I'm using a program called " Atom" for these things. I'm also reading into making my site more "available" by using proper fonts like Sans-serif, using proper colours and not hard-textured backgrounds etc.
So I'm just wondering, what do you think i should MAINLY focus on when practicing HTML & CSS coding, since I'd love to hear some tips on what to focus on/improve on and how to make a website simple but yet functional for any person no matter the disfunctionally of some people with eye issues etc.
Do different programs make coding easier is also something I'm wondering, I know that all the coding languages are the same, but I'm talking more about " simplicity" if you know what i mean.
I've been practicing Html & CSS coding a little bit for over 6 months now, don't go to school for it. I know how to add things like side-menu's, redirection towards other sites etc. I'm using a program called " Atom" for these things. I'm also reading into making my site more "available" by using proper fonts like Sans-serif, using proper colours and not hard-textured backgrounds etc.
So I'm just wondering, what do you think i should MAINLY focus on when practicing HTML & CSS coding, since I'd love to hear some tips on what to focus on/improve on and how to make a website simple but yet functional for any person no matter the disfunctionally of some people with eye issues etc.
Do different programs make coding easier is also something I'm wondering, I know that all the coding languages are the same, but I'm talking more about " simplicity" if you know what i mean.
I don't think using "proper" fonts like sans-serif or whatever has anything to do with the functionality of your website. You can load custom fonts using @font-face in css or load google fonts etc..
Different programs don't have an impact on coding either, but some will complete codes for you for example if you write margin... it will suggest you margin top,bottom, etc.. I code with Visual studio code, excellent editor. Atom is good too, but I feel visual studio code is better.
If you're referring to simplicity in design, you don't really need to produce anything complex. You can produce really simple designs but they look really stunning. I'll do a video on that clarifying this soon actually.
I don't think using "proper" fonts like sans-serif or whatever has anything to do with the functionality of your website. You can load custom fonts using @font-face in css or load google fonts etc..
Different programs don't have an impact on coding either, but some will complete codes for you for example if you write margin... it will suggest you margin top,bottom, etc.. I code with Visual studio code, excellent editor. Atom is good too, but I feel visual studio code is better.
If you're referring to simplicity in design, you don't really need to produce anything complex. You can produce really simple designs but they look really stunning. I'll do a video on that clarifying this soon actually.
Can't wait, thank you so much !
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