

- #INVISION STUDIO VS SKETCH AND INVISION UPDATE#
- #INVISION STUDIO VS SKETCH AND INVISION MANUAL#
- #INVISION STUDIO VS SKETCH AND INVISION PROFESSIONAL#
Having that control over the design in the time dimension is still a lot more than what other tools offer, so for many a designer it can become the reason they will start using InVision Studio. That’s just a few properties and it doesn’t seem possible to add keyframes. Upon an interaction, the position and size of layers can be transitioned. InVision Studio offers one thing that otherwise only UXPin has: timeline animations. You still have to switch between Studio and the InVision prototype, so there’s really no difference there. InVision Studio integrates with InVision prototypes, but so does Sketch with the Craft plugin that InVision developed. Zooming and panning performance is so low that it affects the speed at which I can navigate a design.That means for instance no placement relative from the bottom right of a parent object. No positioning (other than x and y) of objects inside groups.No visual overview of components: just an alphabetical list.You can’t set the height of a text layer, so there’s also no vertical text alignment.Text layers don’t support shadows and blurs.The set of layer properties is limited:.


None of the other applications in the comparison offer all that, but InVision Studio’s current are too limited for my use. I guess that’s sound advice for most beta software, but most of the hyped features are still ‘coming soon’ or are so hidden, that I couldn’t find them:
#INVISION STUDIO VS SKETCH AND INVISION PROFESSIONAL#
Unfortunately the feature set of the early access release that I got is so limited that I would not recommend to start using it for professional work yet. The excitement around InVision Studio was one my motivations for doing this whole comparison. That won’t be my conclusion though! InVision Studio Looking at the table, you may think that Sketch is the worst and UXPin and Figma are tied for first place. ⁂) There are several integrations for Sketch that offer inspector tools, such as InVision Inspect, Zeplin and Avocode. InVision (not to be confused with InVision Studio) is a prototyping tool offering video recording, commenting and presentation mode. ⁑) InVision developed the Craft plugin for Sketch, that integrates Sketch with InVision. *) InVision Studio has an integration with InVision prototyping, that offers these features. Only in online prototype with Adobe account
#INVISION STUDIO VS SKETCH AND INVISION MANUAL#
With multiple files via shared library, on one file with AbstractĪutomatic history with manual save points So how do the features of Sketch, Figma, Adobe XD, UXPin and InVision Studio compare? Feature comparison (updated in April 2019) In this post I use the word components for the reusable chunks of design that are called symbols in Sketch and Adobe XD. I certainly am! I don’t have early access though. Some may be excited to know how the current tools compare to Framer X and Phase.
#INVISION STUDIO VS SKETCH AND INVISION UPDATE#
It hasn’t had a meaningful update in a long time (years?), so I’m hesitant to recommend it to someone who doesn’t know it yet.

It’s not really a screen design tool, but more of a prototyping tool and some other things. I didn’t include it, because its approach is different from the others. Where’s Axure? I used Axure a lot and it’s still the main design tool for many large organizations.
