Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin

Note: I didn't say "they love it so much that they follow it religiously and never break from it". :)

While I don't disagree with your points, there is still ground to be made here.

1) If designers had a "tailwind linter" in their design tool from the start, I believe that they would be encouraged to use it from the start and would start tweaking their designs from the get go to look just as good with it.

The same principle applies to code linters. There are exceptions where developers can disable a linter for specific pieces of code, but having it there encourages the code to be "constrained" in a consistent way.

2) Just because a design has a "13px" padding doesn't imply the designer thought "13 pixels is the best value here and 12 pixels is simply unacceptable". A design linter would help with the "expressiveness" of the design and when things truly are "exceptional" cases.

Note 2: I'm obviously recommending a technical solution to the problem very early in the design process, but the way I solve it now is by discussing it with the designer over a zoom call. I'll show them the design and say "does this look good? I deviated a bit, is that ok?" It almost always is, which is a win for everyone.



Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: