From the course: UXPin for UX Design

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Using multistate elements

Using multistate elements - UXPin Tutorial

From the course: UXPin for UX Design

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Using multistate elements

- [Lecturer] It is the astute UX designer who assumes nothing. Let me give you an example. In the previous couple of exercises, there was a cursor change when the user rolled over Jenna's image. It is reasonable to assume the user will see that cursor change, but the problem with that is, that cursor change was on a computer screen that used a mouse, not the Android device. On an Android device, there is no cursor. So with no clue telling the user to tap a name, the user has no clue that the Jenna element is interactive. Bottom line, bad assumption. With UXPin, combining state changes with interactions makes this sort of bad assumption a thing of the past. So let's see how we can fix that by opening the Interactions project from the previous exercises, and going to the main page. So I've got it open here. And let's start by giving the user a visual clue that Jenna is interactive. So I'm just going to select her layer,…

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