Open source web design tools
- Simple as point, click & tinker
- Edit or style any page, in any state, like it's an artboard
- Hover inspect styles, accessibility and alignment
- Nitpick layouts & content, in the real end environment, at any device size
- Leverage adobe/sketch skills
- Edit any text, replace any image (hi there copywriters, ux writers, pms)
- Design within the chaos: use production or prototypes and the odd states they produce, as artboards and design opportunities
- Design while simulating latency, i18n, media queries, platform constraints, CPUs, screensize, etc
- Make more decisions on the front end of your site/app (a11y, responsive, edge cases, etc)
- No waiting for developers to expose their legos, just go direct and edit the end state (regardless of framework) and execute/test an idea
Give power to designers & content creators, in a place where they currently feel they have little to none, by bringing design tool interactions and hotkeys to the browser
Check out the list of features me and other's are wishing for. There's a lot of fun stuff planned or in demand. Cast your vote on a feature, leave some feedback or add clarity.
Let's do this design community, I'm looking at you! Make a GitHub account and start dreamin' in the issues area! Help create the tool you need to do your job better.
🤔 It's not:
- A competitor to design tools like Figma, Sketch, XD, etc; it's a complement
- Something you would use to start from scratch
- A design system recognizer, enforcer, enabler, or anything
- An interaction prototyping tool
Chrome Extension
Firefox Add-on (coming soon!)
Check the Wiki
Master List of Keyboard Commands
Open Feature Requests
Chat on Gitter
Chat on Spectrum
npm i visbug
VisBug is a custom element on your page that intercepts interactions, selecting the item(s) instead, and then provides keyboard driven patterns to manipulate the selected DOM nodes. It can do these things on any page without the need for extension or browser priveledges. Extension integrations are to power a 2nd screen experience, while also providing browser specific features to enhance the experience.
The illusion of selection and hover interactions are more custom elements. They are sag positioned overtop the elements to provide the same visual feedback that design tools do. It is essential that these elements leverage the shadow DOM; they're in a foreign environment yet need to look the same across any page.
Each tool is a function that gets called when the user changes tools, and expects the feature function to return a function for disassembly/cleanup. Think of it as, "hey feature, you're up" and then later "hey feature, your turn is up, clean up."
It's the responsibility of each feature to register keyboard listeners and handle the manipulations. It's a courtesty to expose functions from a feature for other features to use. Features must be able to handle multiselect.
First off, thanks for taking the time to contribute! Now, take a moment to be sure your contributions make sense to everyone else. Questions or need help building a feature, come chat on Gitter or Spectrum!
Found a problem? Want a new feature? First of all see if your issue or idea has already been reported. If it hasn't, just open a new clear and descriptive issue.
- Fork it!
- Clone your fork:
git clone https://github.com/<your-username>/ProjectVisBug
- Navigate to the newly cloned directory:
cd ProjectVisBug
- Create a new branch for the new feature:
git checkout -b my-new-feature
- Install the packages for development:
npm i
- Make your changes
- Commit your changes:
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
- Push the branch:
git push origin my-new-feature
- Submit a pull request with full remarks documenting your changes through the GitHub UI