I'm a job-seeker from South Korea. At first, I was involved in welding, then studied Mechatronics in a vocational school, and now I'm deeply engrossed in web design and front-end development.
To be honest, I have attention deficit issues which make studying quite challenging. I'm also not skilled at drawing, and my English proficiency isn't the best. Hence, I'm using tools like GPT to even write this.
However, my dream is to bridge the gap between design and development. I want to detail design like architectural or mechanical plans using drafting techniques, and then turn that into something like a blueprint to hand over to developers.
I tried using computer tools, but it was exhausting to have to go through everything bit by bit with a mouse. Hence, I thought it'd be great if there was a method as straightforward as drafting, yet comprehensive at a glance.
If such a method existed, it'd be easy to draft using symbols, shapes, lines, and arrows, and it'd be interpreted consistently. I also wish there was a distinct notation for the accessibility of UI design.
I'm a job-seeker from South Korea. At first, I was involved in welding, then studied Mechatronics in a vocational school, and now I'm deeply engrossed in web design and front-end development.
To be honest, I have attention deficit issues which make studying quite challenging. I'm also not skilled at drawing, and my English proficiency isn't the best. Hence, I'm using tools like GPT to even write this.
However, my dream is to bridge the gap between design and development. I want to detail design like architectural or mechanical plans using drafting techniques, and then turn that into something like a blueprint to hand over to developers.
I tried using computer tools, but it was exhausting to have to go through everything bit by bit with a mouse. Hence, I thought it'd be great if there was a method as straightforward as drafting, yet comprehensive at a glance.
If such a method existed, it'd be easy to draft using symbols, shapes, lines, and arrows, and it'd be interpreted consistently. I also wish there was a distinct notation for the accessibility of UI design.