Sometimes you want to share a machine with descriptive details or comments, so we’ve added annotations to Stately Studio.
34 posts tagged with “stately”
View all tagsTomorrow is part four in our popular Stately Stream series, where we are modeling a semi-complex client-side app using XState, Stately Studio, React and TypeScript. You can catch up on the previous videos in the series below or watch all our past videos in our Stately Streams YouTube playlist.
Two weeks ago, we had what some have called our “best office hours yet.” We introduced a whole bunch of new features and improvements to Stately Studio, including state.new with our new starter machine, annotations, embed mode, and version history. We also gave the first peek at our most significant editor update to date; we call it “codename: blocks,” check out the video to find out why!
It’s been more than six months since the release of Stately Studio 1.0, and we’ve been busy working on Stately Studio and XState. Here are some of the highlights:
Our top priority at Stately is to make it as easy as possible to create robust app logic in the form of state diagrams. That’s why we’re constantly striving to remove any potential barriers.
Today we’re happy to introduce another pro feature for our Stately Studio subscribers; Version History. With this feature, you can save versions of your work as you go and refer back to them in the future.
Are you looking to take your team collaboration to the next level? Do you want to explore the features of Stately and XState to their fullest potential? Then book a live demo with the Stately team!
Last month, Anders showed you how you could import a machine from GitHub by changing the GitHub URL in the browser’s address bar. We’ve added more to our GitHub integration. Our Pro users can now import all the machines from a repository into a Stately Studio project with the Import from GitHub button.
Today we’re happy to introduce another pro feature for our Stately Studio subscribers; import machines from GitHub. With this feature, you can quickly visually machines in any of your GitHub repositories. You can even import the machines to the Studio and keep working on them here 🎉
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.