JSJ 397: Design Systems with Kaelig Deloumeau-Prigent

JSJ 397: Design Systems with Kaelig Deloumeau-Prigent

Kaelig Deloumeau-Prigent is a self taught web developer from west France. He has worked for BBC, The Guardian, and The Financial Times in the UK. He has also worked in the US for SalesForce and currently works for Shopify on their Polaris design system. Shopify has multiple design systems, and Polaris is open source. Today the panel is talking about design systems and developer tooling around design systems. To begin, Kaelig explains what a design system is. A design system is all of the cultural practices around design and shipping a product. It includes things like the words, colors, spacing grid system, and typography, plus guidance on how to achieve that in code. The panelists discuss what has made design systems so popular. Design systems have been around for a while, but became popular due to the shift to components, which has been accelerated by the popularity of React. The term design system is also misused by a lot of people, for it is much more than having a Sketch file. Next, they talk about whether design systems fall under the jurisdiction of a frontend developer or web designers. Kaelig has found that a successful design system involves a little bit of everyone and shouldn’t be isolated to one team. They talk about what the developer workflow looks like in a design system. It begins with thinking of a few common rules, a language, and putting it into code. As you scale, design systems can become quite large and it’s impossible for one person to know everything. You either give into the chaos, or you start a devops practice where people start to think about how we build, release, and the path from designer’s brain to production.The panelists then talk about how to introduce a design system into a company where there are cultural conflicts. Kaelig shares his experience working with SalesForce and introducing a design system there. They discuss what aspects of a design system that would make people want to use it over what the team is currently doing. Usually teams are thankful for the design system. It’s important to build a system that’s complete, flexible, and extensible so that you can adapt it to your team. A good design system incorporates ‘subatomic’ parts like the grid system, color palette, and typography, referred to as design tokens. Design systems enable people to take just the bits of the design system that are interesting to them and build the components that are missing more easily. The conversation turns to the installation and upgrade process of a design system. Upgrading is left up to the customer to do on their own time in most cases, unless it’s one of the big customers. They talk about the role of components in upgrading a design system. Kaelig talks about the possibility of Shopify transitioning to web components. Kaelig shares some of his favorite tools for making a design system and how to get started making one. A lot of design teams start by taking a ton of screen shots and looking at all the inconsistencies.Giving them that visibility is a good thing because it helps get everyone get on the same page. The panelists talk about the role of upper management in developing components and how to prioritize feature development. Kaelig talks about what drives the decision to take a feature out. The two main reasons a feature would be removed is because the company wants to change the way things are done and there’s a different need that has arisen. The show concludes by discussing the possibility of a design system getting bloated over time. Kaelig says that Design systems takes some of the burden off your team, help prevent things from getting bloated, allow you to ship less code. Panelists
  • Chris Ferdinandi
  • Aimee Knight
  • Steve Emmerich
With special guest: Kaelig Deloumeau-PrigentSponsorsLinks Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter PicksSteve Emmerich:Aimee Knight:Chris Ferdinandi:Kaelig Deloumeau-Prigent:Special Guest: Kaelig Deloumeau-Prigent.

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Episoder(738)

JSJ 428: The Alphabet Soup of Performance Measurements

JSJ 428: The Alphabet Soup of Performance Measurements

JavaScript Remote Conf 2020May 14th to 15th - register now!Dan Shappir takes the lead to explain all of the acronyms and metrics for measuring the performance of your web applications. He leads a disc...

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JSJ 427: How to Start a Side Hustle as a Programmer with Mani Vaya

JSJ 427: How to Start a Side Hustle as a Programmer with Mani Vaya

JavaScript Remote Conf 2020May 14th to 15th - register now! Mani Vaya joins Charles Max Wood to talk about how developers can add the enterepreneur hat to the others they wear by starting a side gig. ...

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JSJ 426: Killing the Release Night with Progressive Delivery with Dave Karow

JSJ 426: Killing the Release Night with Progressive Delivery with Dave Karow

JavaScript Remote Conf 2020May 14th to 15th - register now! Dave Karow is a developer evangelist for Split. He dives into how you can deliver software sustainably without burning out. His background i...

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JSJ 425: The Evolution of JavaScript

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Dan Shappir takes the lead and walks the panel through the history of JavaScript and a discussion on ES6, TypeScript, the direction and future of JavaScript, and what features to be looking at and loo...

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JSJ 424: UI5 and web components with Peter Muessig

JSJ 424: UI5 and web components with Peter Muessig

In this episode of JavaScript Jabber the panelists and guest delve into the advantages of the shadow dom, transitioning from polymer js polyfills to native web components when moving for SAP UI to UI5...

10 Mar 202042min

JSJ 423: State of JS

JSJ 423: State of JS

The panelists discuss that latest State of JS survey. They begin talking about the merits and methods of the survey and then discuss the value you can extract from the survey. They also consider the v...

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JSJ 422: CSS and Houdini with Una Kravets

JSJ 422: CSS and Houdini with Una Kravets

Una Kravets talks to the panel about CSS and its future. We dive into what Houdini is and how much of it is implemented in the browsers. She explains how the changes outlined in Houdini will improve t...

25 Feb 20201h

JSJ 421: Semantic HTML with Bruce Lawson

JSJ 421: Semantic HTML with Bruce Lawson

Bruce Lawson is an expert in and proponent of semantic HTML. After receiving some good natured ribbing, Bruce walks the panel through the benefits of semantic HTML. He provides several examples on how...

18 Feb 20201h 8min

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