regarding the discussion here on axis labels/steps, looks like you can use a slider or a numeric input for values in figma.
you can then save those settings as a pre-set style. so if you want "roboto flex width 133," you can save a style with that name and everyone else you share the file with also has that style predefined. if you work at an org, you can save those styles at the org level. sharing pre-set axis locations by adding them as type styles in figma is a very elegant solution. it will be hard for other, non-web-based apps to match this flexibility. well done to all involved.
The ability to save variable font settings as styles and share them across an organization isn't limited to web-based apps. Adobe CC libraries can be used to share character- and paragraph-level styles for desktop apps like InDesign, for example.
oh interesting! I'm mostly familiar with CC library features from managing assets in illustrator. can you save VF styles (locations) this way? or do you mean it just wouldn't be a big leap for adobe to also include VF axis info, if they can already share paragraph and character styles this way?
InDesign does not even consistently maintain axis settings when changing to another font that shares the same axis. I hope Adobe learns to walk before it tries to run, in its variable font support.
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you can then save those settings as a pre-set style. so if you want "roboto flex width 133," you can save a style with that name and everyone else you share the file with also has that style predefined. if you work at an org, you can save those styles at the org level. sharing pre-set axis locations by adding them as type styles in figma is a very elegant solution. it will be hard for other, non-web-based apps to match this flexibility. well done to all involved.
Eager to see the iterations on how the style naming will work with all the multiple axes (xtra, xopq, ytra, yopq, ytlc, ytuc, ytde, etc)!
Thanks @Dave Crossland for the link earlier, makes things very interesting!
http://variationsguide.typenetwork.com
There have been a few interesting threads about parametric axes in the last few days.
Thread heads + tree diagrams.
Does anyone know a good complete-tree reader for Twitter threads?