![]() ![]() XScope is another OSX exclusive and you can pick that up for $50 on the App Store or directly from IconFactory.ĬSS Hat is a nifty Photoshop extension that can help you get from mockup to browser quickly. With Rules, Overlays (similar to PixelPerfect), and a fantastic Loupe tool for doing very tight pixel pushing, xScope is one of those tools that has so many uses that it’s hard to recommend it for just one. I use that mainly for lining up design components with differing sizes. My personal favorite tool is the Guide tool which lets you create visual line guides overlaying your screen. XScope is a swiss army knife of digital creation tools, except this time it’s constrained to frontend web design. ![]() PixelPerfect is a free Chrome Extension with a whole slew of other supported browsers from WellDoneCode. This gives you the advantage of being, without a doubt, pixel perfect. That may sound pointless, but with the ability to adjust the position and opacity of that image and you have a digital onion skin of whatever you are trying to style. PerfectPixel is a Chrome Extension that does one thing: overlays an image onto your browser. I don’t know of a Windows or Linux equivalent to Coda. And, best of all, Preview mode will update in real-time as you make changes so you can create frontend designs, email templates, and prototypes wicked fast and impress your boss (be the envy of your friends!).Ĭoda is an OSX exclusive application and will run you $100 directly from Panic. Preview mode works with any file, anywhere, and opens it in a localized browser directly in Coda – no need to have multiple windows open. While I could rave about Coda forever I’ll wrap up with perhaps my favorite tool: the integrated Browser Preview mode. In addition to its fantastic visual CSS tools, Coda comes equipped with an excellent SFTP client that lets you easily edit server files on the fly to get simple work done, as well as makes transferring files to and from servers drag-and-drop easy as it imitates the OSX Finder experience. Coda has many visual tools to help you write CSS better than you ever imagined, faster than you ever imagined, and cleaner than you ever imagined. Creating a pixel-perfect design is not always easy, but here are a few of my personal favorite four tools that I use, every day, to create gorgeous designs:Īs an IDE Coda is geared very much toward frontend developers/designers and it does that very well. Here there is the hardware_init.Here at Wide Open Technologies we create a lot of cool designs for websites and applications and we always strive to make those cool designs as close to the original designs as possible – pixel perfect. In this case, all I’ve obtained is the freeze of the linux counterpart at ‘starting kernel…’. Then I’ve tried to use the peripheral clock, using the ‘ccmRootmuxGptEnetPll40m’. That means that the period should be 1us, not 10us (measured with a xscope, since after the interval a pin is toggled). If I use the oscillator with a prescaler of 1 (that is the clock is divided by 2) and then I use a fixed (for testing purpose) output compare value of 12, I obtain a delay of 10us, instead of 1us as expected. In either cases, if I use a little or equal to 0 prescaler, Linux is not able to boot, it stucks at ‘Starting kernel…’. I’ve tried using both the ‘gptClockSourceOsc’ and the ‘gptClockSourcePeriph’. I’ve followed the blinking demo app, adapting it to my needs since I need a timer of at least 1us. I’ve also played with the GPIO, that worked as expected too. The aim would be to leave the GPIO and timers modules to the M4, along with PWM, UART, SPI and i2c.įor this reason I’ve modified the device tree and it seems that linux, at least, is working as expected. ![]() I’m developing on the iMX7D colibri SoM and the Viola Plus carrier board. It’s been two days now that I’m working on this and I don’t know how to solve the problems I’m facing. ![]()
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