Global colors effect the whole site which means if you make a change it changes that color. Local only effect things that you force to change. So if you have two greens one local, one global. When you change the local green nothing will change from the site anything set with local green will still stay green until you change the color. However with global when you change that green to say red, now everywhere that you used that green is now red.
@@wpbuilderhelper Okay thanks! I get the difference now. Whats the typical usecase of a local color? Why not always use a global color. Its still kind of confusing.
You might not want the color to change automatically? Maybe for things more like headlines or certain buttons. Otherwise global is probably the best bet for most times.
Nice overview. One of the things that I like about Zion is the interface is similar to Divi. I am not a fan of Elementor because it has that left-side menu that takes up a lot of screen real estate, especially if you build websites on a 13" MacBook Pro. In fact, I switched back to Divi from Elementor because of the crowded screen (and the high cost!). I have been testing the free version of Zion and I am having problems getting the elements to show up on the public screen. I am going to keep trying to get it to work. If I can figure it out, I will probably go for the LTD. I like the development map, although, I am very happy that Divi is finally focusing on getting rid of page bloat. Looking forward to part 2!
I am really on the fence on this product… is it good or bad? UI is rather a turn off to me and slightly convoluted (with the three columns). Capabilities seem to be excellent … (although, buggy at times).
UI could be improved. In terms of the speed I like it. If you have Oxygen depending on how well you work with that you could skip it. If Oxygen was too confusing, I am seeing a lot of people trying it out. For $99 bucks and unlimited licenses it’s a really decent deal. In my humble opinion. It’s not bug free but I wouldn’t call it bad.