Guides

Building a Navigation Component with Variables

April 13, 2022

April 13, 2022

Navigation bar with 3 buttons
Navigation bar with 3 buttons

Navigation is key within any digital interface. Smart Components enable us to create custom interactive navigation components that work perfectly with the rest of your prototype.In this guide, we will cover the concepts of nesting components, adding events to elements in a component using Event Variables, and passing these through your components.

One of the main benefits of using nested components is that it provides full control over its states, such as unique hover states of elements within another component.


Starting at the atomic level

Framer allows you to create fully interactive and animated components, and even allows you to nest components within other components.

We’re building a navigation bar component for a website that will contain two different kinds of nested components, with their own unique interactions. Our project will contain a Navigation bar that contains various nested components, namely five Nav items and one Shopping cart component.

The design of our nested components, the nav list item and the shopping cart, will impact how we design our navigation bar. For this reason, an optimal workflow includes starting with the 'deepest' nested component and building up from there.


Nesting components

Once we have our two components ready, we can start creating the component in which we will nest these. Draw your navigation bar, select it on the canvas and click the Component tool in the Toolbar.

To nest a different component in our new component, just drag any other component to the Component Canvas and place it within your designed navigation bar.


Triggering interactions from the navigation bar

Back on the main canvas, we’d like to be able to tap 'Clothing' and navigate to an entire new Screen. If you’d connect the component using the Prototyping Connector to a new screen, we could set up an Interaction. However, this would be triggered if we tap anywhere within our component.

This isn’t what we want to do, as we want to trigger this transition only from a specific element. This is where Event Variables come in, which are special types of Variables not attached to properties (like opacity or fill) but instead to events.


When we say fast, what do we really mean?

When we talk about a fast canvas or fast computer in general, there are three parts that we mean. First, the time it takes things to load. For example, the time it takes for the app to load or for a specific page or document to load before you can see it and start working. Second, the time it takes to draw (every frame), determining how smooth scrolling and animations are. And finally, the time it takes something to respond to your actions, in other words, the latency or lag you feel—or don’t feel.Just like the makers of any other tool, we use these measurements to assess Framer’s performance.

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