Happy 2023! The Stately team is back from their first off-site of the year in Lisbon and excited to get started on our plans for this year. We thought we’d kick off the year with a reminder of all the features we’ve released since the Stately Studio 1.0 release in October. It’s been just three months, and we already have so much to share.
22 posts tagged with “studio”
View all tagsThe time has finally come; our new docs are ready to share with you all. If you’ve been following our office hours, you know I’ve been talking about these docs for a long time. Thanks to Anders, who used Docusaurus to build us a rock solid easily-maintainable platform with search that actually works, and the whole team, who have contributed reviews, explainers, and examples to get these docs started.
We have introduced a new feature to the Stately Studio, a feature we hope you’ll never see. Let’s call it machine restore, for lack of a better description.
One of our most-requested features has just landed in the Stately Studio; you can now import your machines from code!
Watch import from code in action in our latest video.
Importing from code is handy if you’ve already built machines while working with XState, or have created a machine using our older Stately Viz and haven’t yet tried the Stately visual editor.
It’s been just over a month since we released Stately Studio 1.0, and the team has barely slowed down! We’ve got more features live in the Studio today and even more planned before the end of the year.
If you’re new to the Stately Studio, state machines or statecharts, we have the videos for you! Our new Stately Studio tutorials playlist on YouTube features bite-size videos to help you get started with understanding statecharts and state machines, and start modeling in the Stately Studio.
We’re excited to announce the release of Stately Studio 1.0! 🚀 Our mission is for all app logic to be visually collaborative and accessible to your entire team, and we’ve been working hard to make that a reality.
The Stately team has got some huge features to share with you soon. We’ve been working hard through the summer, which is why we’re already halfway into September by the time I’ve gotten around to this update post.
Farzad and David add more features to their resizable panel using XState and React. Watch Part 1.
Check out the accompanying code on Code Sandbox.
Farzad and David use XState to build the logic for a resizable panel with React in an impromptu live stream.
Check out the accompanying code on CodeSandbox.