![]() ![]() I love writing CSS and I love designing my applications.īut there’s a big gap between writing CSS and how it fits into my development flow. Once they’re all there, you can manage your tree of elements by dragging and dropping them anywhere, adding new components, managing props, and styling the different elements elements, all with a Canvas that shows the state of your work as if you’re working on it in your browser. When creating or managing a project in Codux, all of your components are sucked into the Visual IDE based on the project configuration, or by default if you’re starting your app from Codux. Codux Visual IDEīut this is less like Figma that gives you static code output that you can copy and paste and more like an IDE playground, where all of the changes you make inside of Codux are actually code changes, making realtime updates to your application. What is Codux?Ĭodux is Visual IDE that allows you to use a UI to visually build React applications including creating components, editing them, styling them, and customizing component UI state all with full Typescript integration and support. Disclaimer: This post is sponsored by Codux.
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