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How to draw a website, from desktop to mobile or vice versa?
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How to draw a site correctly, first desktop and then mobile (as it has always been) or vice versa?
As for me, if this is originally a site (and not an application), then it’s worth drawing the desktop version first, and then the mobile version.
Yes, now sites look at mobile phones more than on a PC, but this is originally a site and not an application, and it’s hard to start the mobile version first without seeing the desktop. Because in the mobile version, the blocks are cut down, the texts are also smaller, all sorts of filters (if this is a store) are hidden, the header footer is reduced.
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It seems to me that in design, you first need to draw a full-fledged version, worked it out completely - proceed to the adaptive. In the full version, you can give the user all the information, but in the mobile version, you can miss some part due to attempts to increase the download speed, etc.
In layout, it's the other way around. There is a so-called "mobile first" layout. This is when the site is made up and adapted, moving from a mobile version to a full-fledged desktop one.
Yura never listened to smart people when they told you to leave web design. If you feel that you have a calling, but you see a lack of prospects, it would be a smart decision to go in another direction, and not to stomp on something that does not work out a priori.
Always draw the full version first. Then it is adapted, reduced and limited to smaller screen resolutions. Unfortunately, the methods of amateurs are not known to me.
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