Animation
Capital Terminal
test
Create a stock market desktop dashboard with a warm cream background, white cards with rounded corners and subtle noise texture, and no dark theme. Use three font families: a serif for hero numbers and display text, a monospace for all financial data and timestamps, and a clean sans-serif for everything else. The color palette should be strictly semantic — one color for gains, one for losses, one warm accent for actions — with everything else in neutral grays. Layout: a full-width header with the app name in serif italic and a live clock in mono, a scrolling ticker strip using unicode braille characters with stock data woven between the waveform glyphs, a portfolio hero section with a large animated odometer for the total value and a gain indicator with a breathing glow animation, then a two-column grid with a flexible left column and a fixed-width right sidebar. Left column: a performance area chart card with timeframe toggles, gradient fill, and a tooltip — make holdings in a list below it clickable so they swap the chart to that stock's history with a back button to return to portfolio view. Below the chart, side-by-side cards for a holdings list with animated weight bars and a sector donut chart with hover-expand arcs paired with a volume bar profile. Right sidebar: a search input with an accent-colored focus ring, a scrollable watchlist where each row has a mini sparkline and expands on click to reveal OHLC data and action buttons, and a categorized news feed. Add a trade drawer that slides in from the right edge with spring easing when any trade button is clicked — it should have buy/sell toggle, quantity input with quick-select buttons, order type selector, a live preview card, and a confirmation state that auto-closes. Every card should enter with a staggered spring overshoot animation on page load, and hover states should feel tactile — subtle shadow elevation on cards, horizontal slides on list rows, scale on buttons. The whole interface should feel like a high-end financial publication, not a terminal.
