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The Difference Between Web Designer And Web Developer

The Difference Between Web Designer And Web Developer

Released Thursday, 20th August 2020
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The Difference Between Web Designer And Web Developer

The Difference Between Web Designer And Web Developer

The Difference Between Web Designer And Web Developer

The Difference Between Web Designer And Web Developer

Thursday, 20th August 2020
Good episode? Give it some love!
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What's up guys, the super-popular question today, what's the difference in a web designer and a web developer? I'm gonna put five minutes on the clock. It's a super popular question, but it's also quite heated questions. A lot of people might disagree with my comment you might agree with them and I'm coming at it from a designer's point of view, so let me know what you think in the comments below and maybe we'll come to some sort of agreement but at its basic level I'm just gonna quickly talk about the differences that I see and if you're a different person you might have different skills. So you might come at it differently, but that's fine it's like, you know, not everyone's the same but the interesting Minneapolis web design and web development is kind of like. I may be the easiest way is to look at it like you're building a house so I guess the designer will be the architect who comes up with the plans and you design everything beforehand and then I guess a construction team would deliver that is this is kind of like the developers and there are different types of developers how works are normally. When I'm designing the website, you'll have a UX UI designer and an aGraphic designer or UI designer. So they'll work together. They all go through they'll sketch out the website. They'll put wireframes together. They'll work through the whole user-centered design process and then the end they'll deliver.

Basically kind of like a finished design and you know what? Sometimes it won't be finished sometime. Minneapolis SEO Company just do it differently. But when that designer they think it's ready to go, How companies work now is they do this thing called? It's called agile development. So there are and you're working these things hold stories. So you'll take the design that the designers have done and you'll break it down into small chunks and then you'll pass those small chunks on to the development team and then the front-end developers will make that real. So we work in completely different programs and a designer will work some like Adobe XD or Figma and a front-end developer and to be honest, I don't even know half the programs that they use but they put it together in code like there are different tools for design. As different tools for putting it together in code but different skill sets involved so. After I've dabbled around in a little bit of front-end development and you know, it's quite fun to actually build stuff. My brain doesn't work like that. Sometimes I get a bit frustrated when there are problems, but there's they work in a few different web technologies today work in HTML, which is the actual fundamental code really for the website it's not huge in the library. It's massively not this is rocket science, but HTML is basically telling the computer what to display on the screen then there's CSS.

The HTML says let hesitate then the CSS will say this table needs to look like this, so the CSS is all the graphics all the fonts all the color room or the styling for that table. The same piece of HTML could look a million different ways and that's all down to the CSS that they do and then there are things like JavaScript which is so you've got your table you go how it looks then JavaScript is kind of like the interactive part of it so it could be well where's it pulling the data from how animate and the complex nature of it? It was front-end developers. You do the visual start-up on the web site together in the back end developers. Who do all the logic and they're like databases world the information stored and front-end people which is how the website is displayed on the screen will figure out how to talk to the backend people where all the information comes from and they're the ones who bring it together. So,  if you're more into coding if you're more into I guess mathematics and logic and trying to make things work then development is more for you designers, you know it's kind of changing over time and there are actual tools that are bringing them together. So like web flow. So web-flow something they can design and develop it and I imagine over time possibly these two jobs are gonna come together, maybe more UI designers and developers. I think UX is more research base and more. I think it's too broad really to have one person do it all. Imagine maybe in small companies and startups where they have limited funds and you might get a UX design a UI device and developer in one but for the majority, people think it's best to separate your skill sets and go away your passion about if you're passionate about design and talking to customers and tests and things then you might find UX more rewarded. 

If you're more passionate about making things and maybe you don't have as much control how it looks but you want to take something and make it then development might be the way to go and maybe if you like both you'll be lucky and find a job which combines both there the key differences. So, the key differences are a designer will work in different programs. They'll talk to customers more and they'll put together a plan kind of like the architect lays out a house and then the developer will take that plan and make it a real current of like the construction team do on a house can still work with the architect and change things that they think. The way it's implemented is not right because the architect isn't always hard upset right and they not doing the groundwork. So there's a relationship between the two but I think a different skill sets all doing possibly could move together closely with the introduction of things like web flow and other tools but I still think the different mindsets really and I think there's always going to be an option for both and in my experience, I've always found that there are more developers than designers because I think you can design things a lot quicker than you can actually make them and there's like bugs and tests and goes along. So possibly if you're looking for a job when you're worried about the number of opportunities, I'd promised an at the moment is probably more development jobs, but I may be wrong in the future that's just for my personal point of view. For the teams, I work with maybe there are five developers and one designer or guys just go. What were you passionate about? If you're passionate and you have the commitment and you know you're pulling the work and you'll get a job do an either but they're two different skill sets let me know in the comments what you think you might disagree, but this is just my own personal opinion and until next time keep designing or developing.



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