Settings and activity
26 results found
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104 votesRicardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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1,472 votesfeature-under-review · 342 comments · Adobe XD: Feature Requests (Read-Only) » 01 : Design mode · Admin →Ricardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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800 votesRicardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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609 votesfeature-under-review · 33 comments · Adobe XD: Feature Requests (Read-Only) » 01 : Design mode · Admin →Ricardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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1,111 votesfeature-under-review · 49 comments · Adobe XD: Feature Requests (Read-Only) » 01 : Design mode · Admin →Ricardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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2,030 votesRicardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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1,717 votesRicardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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3,888 votesfeature-in-the-backlog · 525 comments · Adobe XD: Feature Requests (Read-Only) » 01 : Design mode · Admin →Ricardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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1,803 votesRicardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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3,310 votesRicardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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257 votesRicardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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7 votesRicardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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149 votes
This is something we’d like to get more feedback on.
a) Some apps (such as Adobe Illustrator and InDesign) behave the way XD does now: reducing fill opacity (not overall object opacity) keeps the whole shadow visible but reduces its opacity in proportion with the fill color’s opacity. At zero fill opacity, the shadow is completely gone along with the fill (unless you have a border, in which case you have a thin ring-shaped shadow left).
b) Other apps (such as Photoshop or Sketch) behave differently: reducing fill opacity leaves the shadow’s opacity at full strength, but clips the shadow so you don’t see it through the translucent fill. At zero fill opacity, in the middle of the shape you can see what’s behind it completely unobscured, but outside the shape’s edges you still see the drop shadow at full strength.
Which one do people prefer? Do you need to…
Ricardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·An error occurred while saving the comment -
16 votes
I’m leaving this open for now, but just as a heads up, there’s an overset text alert on selection of area text. https://twitter.com/elainecchao/status/1128363094760132609?s=20
An error occurred while saving the comment Ricardo Antonio Cabral commentedThanks Elaine, this is good, but it could be so much better.
In the current implementation the dot doesn't make the issue obvious enough, the dot within the circle is too small and there's no color indicating an error. This could be fine for a user that already knows about this, but new users will have a hard time realizing that's what that dot is intended for, if they even notice it.
Ricardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·An error occurred while saving the comment Ricardo Antonio Cabral commentedA visual indicator when text flows outside of the bounds of the text box should suffice. It could work just like it does on InDesign, which displays a little red square with a plus sign if the text exceeds the text box... See attached image for reference.
An alert when attempting to share for review or development could also help avoid sharing a design with text out of bounds.
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851 votesRicardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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767 votesfeature-under-review · 34 comments · Adobe XD: Feature Requests (Read-Only) » 04 : Sharing on the web · Admin →Ricardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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1,728 votesRicardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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1,025 votesRicardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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1,792 votesfeature-started · 39 comments · Adobe XD: Feature Requests (Read-Only) » 02 : Prototype mode · Admin →Ricardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
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488 votesRicardo Antonio Cabral supported this idea ·
I'd prefer if both options were possible, and a simple "Knock out" checkbox to switch the behaviour.