2013-10-02


  

Designing and developing can be time-consuming, especially when the project involves a new challenge, putting the team or freelancer into unknown territory. Moreover, time is a key factor in productivity. Working efficiently enables us to deliver better value at a competitive price.

However, some steps can be repeated for every project. These are steps we know and should make as quick as possible in order to have more freedom to experiment with new solutions.

This article presents a collection of tools, tips and tricks that will make your standard workflow as fast and practical as possible, so that you have more time for the exciting parts of the project.

Ready? Here we go!

Tips And Tricks

Design Workflow

“My Secret for Color Schemes”

Erica Schoonmaker shares her trick for matching up colors and creating a nice color scheme. Read more…

Useful Aligning and Spacing

Kris Jolls creates squares for the various spaces he has between elements. This cuts down time and makes sure everything is aligned and spaced properly. Read more…

“The Ultimate Photoshop Web Design Workspace”

Jacob Cass shares his set-up for the ultimate Web design workspace in Photoshop. Read more…

Coding Workflow

“Perfect Workflow in Sublime Text 2”

This is a must for all Sublime users. Ilya Grigorik has put together a two-hour tour de force to make you a Sublime ninja! Read more…

“Development Workflow for 2013”

Learn what a modern development workflow looks like, from editors and plugins to authoring abstractions, testing and DVCS integration. Read more…

“Vertical Editing” (with TextMate)

Learn how to vertically edit in general and with TextMate in particular. It pairs best practices with vendor-specific redundant properties. Read more…

“Prevent background-color Bleed on Touch Screens”

Add outline: 1px solid #fff to your code to stop background-color bleeding on touchscreens. Read more…

“Quick Tip: Rounded Corners Done Right”

Improperly nested corners are a detail that can ruin a brilliant design. Learn how to do it the right way. Read more…

“The //* /*/ //*/ Comment Toggle Trick”

This is a little trick to make development faster. Not suitable for production code. Read more…

“Outdenting Properties for Debugging CSS”

Martin Sutherland usually ends up adding a ton of properties to figure out how things fit together. Here is a little trick to remove the properties before a project goes live. Read more…

“Favicons Next to External Links”

A little trick to display an external favicon and next to the corresponding link, using simple lightweight jQuery. Read more…

“DevTools Tips and Tricks”

These slides include tips and tricks for performance. You will be surprised what Chrome DevTools can do. (Use the arrow keys to navigate the slides.) Read more…

“Sublime Text Workflow That Beats Coda and Espresso”

Andrey Tarantsov talks about jumping into Sublime Text 2 and and setting up a workflow that beats traditional tools such as Coda and Espresso. Watch the video or read more…

“Speed Up CSS Prototyping

This is a simple trick to overlay a grid or a mock-up over a page that you’re styling. It also allows you to edit content directly in the browser to see how the layout responds to various lines of text. Read more…

“Git: Twelve Curated Tips and Workflows From the Trenches”

12 simple tips for using Git, including: make “git diff” wrap long lines, set a global proxy, and clone a specific branch. Read more…

“The JavaScript “Ah ha!” Moment”

This article collects comments of people having their “Ah ha!” moment with JavaScript — that is, the moment they learned something that made JavaScript click for them. Read more…

Here are more articles and thoughts to help you improve your coding workflow:

“Sublime Text: My Workflow and Useful Resources“”

Bassam Ismail shares his workflow in Sublime Text. It’s a list-style article that will give you a quick overview. Read more…

“Uncle Dave’s Ol’ Padded Box”

A trick by Dave Rupert that helps with his responsive design workflow. Read more…

“The Many Ways to Work With CSS Preprocessors”

Jeff Croft has collected different approaches to working with CSS preprocessors and compares them in this article. Read more…

“Find in Files With CSS Selectors”

Element Finder searches your project for a given CSS selector — for example, .layout-fluid #sidebar — and lists the files that contain elements matching that selector. Read more…

“My Workflow: Never Having to Leave DevTools”

Remy Sharp shares his workflow from beginning to end without leaving Chrome DevTools. Read more…

“Bulletproof Demos“

Record modes let you record every request Chrome makes. Playback mode serves requests out of that recorded cache just as if they were being loaded on the spot. It records not where you click or what you open, but just every request as it moves over the wire. Read more…

OS Productivity

Alfred workflow tips and tricks

David Ferguson shares tips and tricks for working with Alfred. Read more…

“SSH: More Than Secure Shell”

This article covers less common SSH use cases, such as using password-less, key-based login, setting up local per-host configurations, exporting a local service through a firewall, accessing a remote service through a firewall and more. Read more…

Share Your Hidden OS X Features or Tips and Tricks

This is a thread with a whole range of OS X tips and tricks. So far, there are 126 comments, and you can add your own. Read more…

“Alfred Workflows”

You find various workflows, provided by Isometry, including UNIX man page search and filtering text through arbitrary shell one-liners. Read more…

Tricks

This is a collection of tricks for various areas, collected by Carles Fenollosa. Areas include bash, pseudo-aliases for commonly used long commands, VIM, tools and networking. Read more…

Lifehacks

Sync a Server to Dropbox Every Day Automatically

This script makes backing up to Dropbox easy. It also allows you to exclude folders. Start backing up today, and prevent data loss. Read more…

“Ask Slashdot: How Do You File Paper Documents at Home?”

How do you file paper documents at home? This discussion covers how to organize your documents in the digital age. Read more…

“Print Files From Any Mobile Phone Using Dropbox”

This trick will help you print documents, emails, photos, PDF files and more from a mobile phone and tablet to your printer. All you need is a printer connected to the computer and a mobile device for sending print jobs. It’s a great alternative to official apps that would cost you money. Read more…

“When to Buy Airline Tickets”

Planning your next trip? Dan Loewenherz did some research about the best time to buy an airline ticket and explains how you can do an analysis yourself. He has also written two follow-up posts. Read more…

“How Does Trello Access the User’s Clipboard?”

When you hover over a card in Trello and press Ctrl + C, the URL of this card is copied to your clipboard. How does Trello do this? Find the answer in this post. Read more…

Tools

Collaboration

TimeZoneSlider

Time-syncing around the globe can be tricky. This tool lets you add the names and locations of people involved to find the best meeting time. Send the synced time to others and don’t risk hard feelings about time-conversion mistakes. Read more…

World Time Buddy

World Time Buddy is a cross between a time-zone converter, a world clock converter and an online meeting scheduler. It an online productivity tools for those who often finding themselves traveling, in flight, in online meetings or just calling friends and family abroad. Read more…

Doodle

Doodle can’t be recommended enough. It is a easy and uncomplicated tool for finding and scheduling a date that suits everyone — with only one email. Read more…

“How to Solve the ‘Sharing Huge Design Files Amongst Teams’ Problem”

This article is about how BitTorrent can be used to sync large files between team members. Key problems to overcome were how to share files between designers and between designers and developers and how to resolve points of failure. Read more…

Screenhero

Screenhero is another tool for collaborative screen-sharing. The great things is that each user gets their own mouse, and both users are always in control. Read more…

Productivity

SoFresh: Automatically Refreshing Your Browser

SoFresh is a CSS refresh bookmarklet. It allows you to select which files to refresh. The files are refreshed every time you save them, so that you don’t need to refresh your browser. Read more…

Divvy

Divvy is a new way to manage your workspace. It enables you to quickly and efficiently “divvy up” your screen into precise portions. Read more…

Shortcat: Keyboard Productivity App for Mac OS X

It takes an average of three seconds to move your hand from the keyboard to mouse, click once, and then return to the keyboard. Shortcat is a keyboard tool for Mac OS X that allows you to keep your hands on the keyboard, saving time and energy. Read more…

The Thinkerbot

Logic is the enemy of creativity. By grabbing a steady stream of pure Internet randomness, this app injects non-linear inspiration into any brainstorming session. Read more…

SizeUp

SizeUp allows you to quickly resize and position windows with keyboard shortcuts or a handy menu-bar icon. Read more…

DragonDrop

DragonDrop lets you set down what you’re dragging, leaving you free to find the destination without having to worry about holding down the mouse button. Read more…

Slate

Slate is a window-management application similar to Divvy and SizeUp (covered below), but free and less limited. It attempts to overcome their limitations by simply being extremely configurable. Read more…

Making Use of the Cloud

SortMyBox

SortMyBox works like email filters, but for your Dropbox files. It magically moves files to folders based on your rules. Read more…

Servus: For Mac and Dropbox

Give your files some meaning and a nice layout when your share them with others. Servus for Mac easily turns any file on your computer into a branded download page, hosted on Dropbox. Read more…

Send to Dropbox

Ever wish you could email files to your Dropbox? With this tool, you can. All you have to do is log into Dropbox, get your unique email address, and start sending files. Read more…

“Versioning Your Graphics Files With Dropbox”

This quick tutorial explains how you can version graphic files via Dropbox. Read more…

DropTunes

Create your own music-streaming service with this little app. DropTunes lets you stream music from Dropbox. Add tracks to your playlist, and browse while song is playing. Read more…

sideCLOUDload

This tool lets you send files from a URL directly to the cloud (currently, Dropbox and email) without the need to download them. This is perfect to save on bandwidth when you discover great stuff with your phone on the go. Read more…

Post Via Dropbox

This WordPress plugin allows you to post and edit on your blog with text files uploaded via Dropbox. Read more…

Site44

Site44 turns Dropbox folders into websites. You can edit the HTML locally; this way, your website will always be up to date. Read more…

Design, Color and Image Tools

Hex Color Tool

Hex is a color tool that automatically displays any hex color in darker and lighter shades. Read more…

GuideGuide

GuideGuide make dealing with grids in Photoshop easy. Pixel-accurate columns, rows, midpoints and baselines can be created based on a document or selection with the click of a button. Guide sets can be saved for repeated use. Read more…

ColorBlendy

Ever fire up Photoshop just to multiply a couple of colors? ColorBlendy can do this easily in your browser. Read more…

CMYK to Pantone

Input a CMYK color code, and this tool will work out which Pantone colors are close. Read more…

ImageMagick

ImageMagick is a command-line program that can do many operations on images quickly and with high quality. It’s especially useful for resizing and sharpening images, generating thumbnails, etc. Read more…

Development and Testing

“Reconciling SVG and Icon Fonts”

This is the first in a series of three articles on SVG. Romain over at Hull explains how to set up a powerful design workflow, going from Sketch all the way to icon fonts, all automated. Part two shows how to dissect the fonts and go crazy with their components. Part three shows how to do the same with sprites and Photoshop. Read more…

Emmet Documentation

Emmet (previously known as Zen Coding) is a Web developer’s toolkit that could greatly improve your HTML and CSS workflow. Read more…

Alias

Alias enables you to manage all of your aliases online and to browse a list of cool aliases submitted by others. From there, you can run a single command to copy your aliases back into your profile should you require them. Read more…

Anvil

Anvil is a menu-bar application for managing local websites. It takes your website and serves it up locally with a .dev URL, without requiring you to change system-level configuration files or hack around in the Terminal. Read more…

DOM Monster

DOM Monster is a cross-platform, cross-browser bookmarklet that will analyze the DOM and other features of the page you’re on, and give you its bill of health. Read more…

prettyPrint.js

prettyPrint.js is an in-browser JavaScript variable dumper, similar in functionality to ColdFusion’s cfdump tag. Read more…

Resemble.js

Resemble.js analyzes and compares images with HTML5 canvas and JavaScript. It can be used for any image analysis and comparison need you might have in the browser. Read more…

Review

Updating large and possibly responsively designed websites can be a hassle. You never know whether a change will break anything. This tool gets screenshots of all of your running websites in different resolutions, so that you can spot any issues. Read more…

BrowserStack

BrowserStack gives you instant access to all desktop and mobile browsers, which is great for testing your designs, especially if you cannot afford to buy many devices. Read more…

Zippopotamus

Zippopotamus makes working with postal codes and ZIP codes easy. It delivers a free API in JSON response format, supports over 60 countries, is perfect for autocompletion and open for crowdsourcing and contribution. Read more…

Here are more development and testing tools you can check out:

“SSH Can Do That? Productivity Tips for Working With Remote Servers”

SSH has many features that are helpful when working regularly with files on remote servers. If you regularly use SSH, it’s worth spending a little time learning about these and configuring your environment to make life easier. Read more…

“How to Kill an Unresponsive SSH Session”

Learn a handy trick for when an active SSH session stops responding, often due to a lost connection and when the normal Ctrl + C doesn’t work. Read more…

Snoopy

Snoopy is a bookmarklet for poking around on Web pages. It’s intended for use on mobile browsers that don’t have a “view source” option. However, you might find it useful on your desktop browser, too. Read more…

Catapulty

This little tool will make your life as a cross-browser coder easier. Once it is set up, sharing the same URL across all of your browsers becomes simple. Read more…

Gridwax

A really simple tool to overlay a vertical grid on any website. Simply drag it into your bookmark bar and adjust the vertical spacing and offset using only the Shift and arrow keys. Read more…

Mobile Perf

Web development on mobile is especially challenging. Mobile Perf displays a menu with links that load other bookmarklets, including Firebug Lite, Page Resources, DOM Monster, SpriteMe and CSSess. Read more…

Version.js

Version.js is a tool for testing different script versions with the switch of a query string. Read more…

“Easily Checking in JavaScript if a CSS Media Query Has Been Executed”

With this trick of responsive development, easily check in JavaScript if a CSS media query has executed. Read more…

“How to Test a Website for Retina on Windows Without an Actual Retina Display?”

In Firefox, go to about:config, find layout.css.devPixelsPerPx, and then change it to your desired ratio (1 for normal, 2 for Retina, etc.). Just refresh the page and you’re done! Read more…

Little Helpers

Style Manual

Is English not really your thing, or not your first language? This reference document by Andy Taylor will help you find the right answer to style-related issues. Read more…

13 Bills

This is a great tool for complicated bill-splitting. It’s especially handy when you have to split a bill according to the amount of time people have been around. Read more…

The Universal Packing List

Feed in the details of your next trip (timeframe, climate, gender, accommodation, kids, type of trip, activities, transportation and bag size), and this dynamic tool will work out what you should pack. Read more…

Long Press

This tool simulates the alternate character choice that you have on Android and iOS keyboards. Read more…

Sejda

Sejda is a great online tool for manipulating PDF files when your preferred software is not at hand. It has many advanced features, including merging, splitting and combining. Read more…

CreateMyInvoice

If you need a quick and simple invoice, this tool turns your raw data into a presentable invoice. The tool offers five free invoices per month, which is great if you only need to use it every now and then. Read more…

StatusPage.io

StatusPage.io is tool that becomes active when your service experiences downtime of any kind. Activity incidents are prominently displayed at the top of your page for visitors to see right when they arrive.Read more…

Beathound

Something for music lovers. Feed your iTunes library XML file and get a weekly update of new releases from your favorite artists. Read more…

Syncios

This tools converts your favorite music or ringtones to MP3, M4A, M4R or CAF format, and converts video to MP4, M4V or MOV format for enjoyment on your iPhone, iPod or iPad. It works both ways. It also includes other handy features that are worth checking out. Read more…

Skrivr

This is for minimalists who don’t want to deal with cluttered admin interface that makes publishing complicated. Skrivr lets you write, save and publish your writing. Read more…

“List of All Countries in All Languages and All Data Formats”

This is a great resource that lists all countries in all languages and in all data formats. Read more…

TokenPhrase

TokenPhrase is a simple gem that generates unique phrases to use in your app as tokens. Read more…

Linkrr

Linkrr is a small tool that transforms multiple unclickable links into clickable ones. Once you’ve gathered all of your links, Linkrr can open them with only one click. In some cases, you’ll have to disable your popup blocker. Read more…

LinkChecker

This highly rated and popular Firefox add-on tests the validity of links on any Web page. Read more…

Useful Chrome Extensions

Tab Wrangler

Tab Wrangler automatically closes inactive tabs but makes it easy to get them back, too. It works similar to AutoClose Tabs for Firefox. Read more…

Responsive Inspector

Responsive Inspector is a simple Chrome extension that allows you to view the media queries of websites you visit. It is very useful when developing responsive layouts because it visually shows what resolutions are defined in style sheets. Read more…

Shortcut Manager

With this extension, change the browser’s default shortcut keys, and assign any bookmarklets or JavaScript actions to your hotkeys. It works like Keyconfig on Firefox. Read more…

Auto Login

Your browser already fills in your user name and password, so why not have it click “Submit,” too? This tool automatically logs you into websites that Chrome has saved a password for. Read more…

Tincr

Tincr lets you edit and save files from Chrome Developer tools. It supports live reloading and saves changes to the right file automatically. Works for Mac, Windows and Linux. Read more…

OneTab

OneTab is perfect for anyone who tends to open too many tabs in Chrome. It saves up to 95% of memory and minimizes clutter by reducing all tabs into one. Read more…

Last Clicks…

Browser Pong

Here is an attempt to expand how you think of the browser. Browser Pong lives between multiple open windows. During play, the space between windows is transformed into a playing field — the abstracted tennis court of Pong. Browser Pong really is thinking outside the box. Read more…

“Talks to Help You Become a Better Front-End Engineer in 2013”

Addy Osmani has curated talks that he has found helpful this year. The advice shared in them will equip you with the knowledge to become a better front-end engineer. Read more…

The Setup

This collection of interviews asks people from all walks of life what they use to get the job done. Read more…

“Learn Something Every Day“

UK-based design studio Young has published a book of 265 facts to help you learn something new every day. Additionally, you can purchase some great fact shirts. There is also a free iPhone app. Read more…

eBooks Compiled From Stack Overflow

These books contain the top questions from a selection of the top tags on Stack Overflow. The top questions include those with a score of 10 or greater. Read more…

Jourrrnal

Jourrrnal is a blog that publishes interviews about the workflows of some of the most active and talented Dribbble members. Read more…

How I Work

This page collects little tips on how other people work. Rather than reading blog posts on why one way is better than another, read why one person loves a certain way of working, and judge for yourself whether it’s worth adopting. Read more…

“My Radical Productivity Experiment”

Michael Schechter has experimented with different approaches to find what works for his own productivity. If you haven’t found a decent workflow for yourself, figure one out. Read more…

Further Reading

“Landscaping With Front-End Development Tools,” by Cody Lindley.

“History of Front-End Tooling,” by Jonathan Kemp.

“The Modern Web Development Workflow,” by Paul Irish.

“Tooling For The Modern Web App Developer” (slides), by Addy Osmani.

“The New Wave Utility Belt” (slides), by Addy Osmani.

“How to Debug Node.js Applications,” at Stack Overflow.

“Simple Tools for Front-End Developers,” by Louis Lazaris.

Last but not least: WebPlatformTools.org.

There you have it! A collection of great tools, tips and tricks that members of our community have found very useful. Hopefully, some of them will speed up your workflow or solve one of your confounding issues. Maybe they will even inspire you to share some of your hidden secrets of productivity.

If your favorite tool, tip or trick is not in this list, make sure you share it with us in the comments section below. Have any of the above changed you life? If so, let us know more!

(al, il, ea)

© Melanie Lang for Smashing Magazine, 2013.

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