![]() Yeah I think that would be great, although I seem to remember reading somewhere that this would be extremely complex with the way the prototype viewer has been built. However when viewing Figma prototypes, it seems like the text size is dependant on the size of the screen you’re viewing it on. If I use Chrome developer tools and play around with the width of the responsive viewport, text size isn’t increasing or decreasing. This is where the problem arises - to my knowledge, text sizes should not scale proportionally like this, right? ![]() We can either:Ī) View it at 100% of the original size (since we’re viewing this on a 1440px wide screen, we would need to scroll horizontally in order to view the entire design, so this is not ideal)ī) Scale it down to fit our screen size, which means the entire design is scaled proportionally to suit our 1440px. In contrast, let’s say we design a responsive layout on a 1920px wide frame in Figma, then view it in prototype mode on a 1440px wide screen. So when a browser window is resized, although elements will move around, it should not affect the text size. This is similar to what we do when we set our constraints in Figma. I could be wrong, and would gladly be corrected, but from my understanding real, coded web pages should behave responsively as a browser window is resized, they should not scale up or down proportionally. Not sure if I’ve missed something here, but this is still a problem. However, if I view the prototype and play around with the size of the browser window, it doesn’t act in the same way. In Figma, I can play around with the frame size, and it will act in a responsive way. It’d be great if, when users are viewing the prototype in the browser, the design would behave in align with the responsive design you’ve built. HOWEVER, this means I have to change the size of each frame, and if you’re working with a prototype with lots of frames, this would take forever. This solves half the problem - if a customer asks to see the design in a different desktop size, I can simple resize the frame, and it will change in a responsive way, and there won’t be any fiddling around to do. ![]() I always take responsiveness into consideration, but I rarely took the time to properly set my constraints and grids, as I rarely had to demonstrate with my prototypes how the responsiveness would work. Thanks for the response, I’ve somehwat discovered a solution to this as I went down the rabbit hole of grids and responsive design. ![]()
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