
We're not sure that there's enough new in version 11 to merit an upgrade from Web Designer 10, unless you desperately need its cloud features. As it stands today, clients or colleagues without their own copy of Web Designer could make basic updates to a site, have them automatically replicate to your computer, and even publish them to the live site without needing to involve you.

At present, users are limited to editing simple text or picture elements which aren't part of a group or subject to effects like shadows, but Xara says that it's working to add more features. Configure your Xara working directory so it's on your cloud drive, and cloud.xara will let you, or anyone else to whom you grant access, open projects and make changes from a browser.Ĭloud.xara editing is only a beta, but it's a good idea with strong potentialĬloud editing should work in most browsers running on any platform, although in practice a smartphone screen was just too small to be practical - Xara has PCs, Macs, iPads or other tablets in mind.

Rather than modifying the live website, it's effectively a web version of Web Designer which works on projects stored in Dropbox or Google Drive. The new cloud editing function is currently light on features and displays a prominent 'BETA' sash, but our first impressions were very positive. It's great for when multiple designers are working on larger projects, but if two users make changes at the same time, the software can't handle merging them into a single updated file. web project file from within the relevant cloud app, once that's done, multiple users can work on the same site, save their changes and have them replicate automatically to all. Although you have to set up synchronisation of the. Synchronising site changes using either Dropbox or Google Drive is now supported for the first time. When published, all the width variants are contained in a single dynamic HTML file, and the most apt one displayed to suit the host device. For the best results you might want to manually create different crops in your images or drop certain elements or content from your mobile site for simplicity, while keeping core text and menu options shared across all variants. You can then choose which edits will replicate across them all to minimise effort. Web Designer can also cater to a wide variety of screen sizes and input methods with its Responsive Web Design feature, which makes several variants of a site with widths to suit various screens.

Here we're modifying Twitter, Facebook and email buttons so that they stick in place while the page scrolls
