Your submission was sent successfully! Close

Thank you for contacting us. A member of our team will be in touch shortly. Close

You have successfully unsubscribed! Close

Thank you for signing up for our newsletter!
In these regular emails you will find the latest updates about Ubuntu and upcoming events where you can meet our team.Close

The App Design Guides go live (bit by bit)

Stephanie

on 2 August 2016

This article was last updated 7 years ago.


The App Design Guides have a new design and content refresh to better communicate the new convergent UI toolkit, and visualise best practice for designers and developer wishing to build an app or scope on Ubuntu. We will be posting these guides over the coming days and weeks.

What’s to come…

Phase 1 – Get started and Building blocks

The first section of the guide showcases the rationale behind our design values and philosophy, as well the convergence story, and reasons why you should design for Ubuntu.

The building block section will contain all the components you need to start building your application. It will feature UI examples of how the component will look inside an app across screen sizes, as well as breaking them apart so you can see what goes where, and how.

See it here.

Phase 2 – Patterns

Patterns will include best practice solutions for using navigation, gestures and our predefined layouts which allows for an adaptive layout.

Phase 3 – System integration

System integration will feature the number of a touchpoints your app can plug into inside the Ubuntu operating system shell, such as the launcher, notifications and indicators. For example, you can add a count emblem over your app icon inside the Launcher to show unread messages or available updates.

Phase 4 – Resources and Style

Resources will include handy downloads such as the color palette, icon set and fonts to get you on the way to building your very own Ubuntu app.

What has been changed?

New design:

  • We reduced the copy to be more concise and understandable
  • Added detailed visuals to show interactions in real app situations
  • Introduced quick takeaway information boxes for advice and developer links to API documentation
  • Consolidated some sections and added new content based on user testing

Here’s a sneak peak…

New sections

As well as ‘Get Started’, ‘Patterns’ and ‘Building blocks’ we will now introduce: ‘System integration’ and ‘Resources’ to the list, as well as an overview page for each section highlighting key areas.

Why do we need guidelines?

The guidelines are a big part of communicating design practices and philosophy to the community and the wider audience. Without it, we wouldn’t have consistency in our design language and people who want to develop or design on Ubuntu wouldn’t be able to maintain the identity we so love.

Throughout the guide you will see the rationale behind our design values through the development our Suru visual language and philosophy.

Over to you…

We can’t wait to see your app designs and hope that our design practices will help you achieve a great user experience on Ubuntu.

Ubuntu desktop

Learn how the Ubuntu desktop operating system powers millions of PCs and laptops around the world.

Newsletter signup

Get the latest Ubuntu news and updates in your inbox.

By submitting this form, I confirm that I have read and agree to Canonical's Privacy Policy.

Related posts

Announcing Authd: OIDC authentication for Ubuntu Desktop and Server

Today we are announcing the general availability of Authd, a new authentication daemon for Ubuntu that allows direct integration with cloud-based identity...

Meet Canonical at Open Source Summit Europe 2024

Join Canonical, the publisher of Ubuntu, as we attend the upcoming Open Source Summit Europe 2024 in Austria. Hosted by the Linux Foundation, this summit is...

Canonical releases Landscape 24.04 LTS

Landscape 24.04 LTS is Landscape’s first LTS release, with a modernised backend, web portal, snap management, and repository management features.