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21 posts tagged with “stately”

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6 minute read

Farzad Yousefzadeh
Laura Kalbag

We’re excited to share a feature that unlocks a whole new level of power and flexibility in Stately’s editor: sources. With sources, you can now provide implementation source code for your actions, actors, and guards, making syncing between the editor and your codebase a breeze.

One minute read

Laura Kalbag

We’ve updated the Learn Stately videos for our newest features! Watch these videos for a quick tour of how to use the editor in 8 minutes. You can find these videos in the Studio by following the Learn Stately banner link or in the editor menu > Help > Learn Stately.

5 minute read

Gavin Bauman
Parker McMullin

TIDEFI turns to Stately to build a resilient financial platform that prioritizes user-friendly transactions and investments.

The Stately team had the pleasure of sitting down with Parker McMullin, Senior Frontend Lead at TIDEFI, to discuss how our logic modeling and visualization tooling helped him manage app complexity and onboarding in TIDEFI’s financial services platform. Parker was so kind as to provide his experiences below, covering the very beginnings of his project from design to development as well as the challenges encountered and how other Stately users came to his aid. He shares his firsthand experiences applying modern software design patterns to his project, engaging with the technical community, and proving instrumental in shaping the direction of XState V5. We’re honored to have Parker in our community, and we hope his words can inspire teams to better navigate complexity in their own apps!

25 minute read

David Khourshid

今天,我们很高兴终于发布了 XState v5!这是 XState 的一个新主要版本,专注于 actors,并帮助您比以前的版本更快、更轻松地开始使用 XState。

状态机转换可能需要零时间,但从 XState v4 过渡到 v5 花了很长时间。我们在 2018 年 10 月发布了 XState v4,并在此后的大部分时间里一直致力于下一个主要版本的开发。凭借 GitHub 上超过 25k 颗星、npm 上每周 100 万次下载以及一个了不起的社区,我们能够倾听和学习那些在生产中使用 XState 的人,并创建一个更强大但更简单(且更小!)的版本。

12 minute read

David Khourshid

It’s been about a year since we’ve released Stately Studio 1.0, and a lot has happened. Stately Studio is essentially a visual software modeling tool that strives to make it easy to create, manage, and use state machines, no matter how complex they may get. Primarily, it served as a powerful set of devtools for XState (an open-source library for creating state machines, statecharts and actors in JavaScript and TypeScript). You could import XState code to a state diagram, modify it visually in an intuitive drag-and-drop canvas, and export to XState. Eventually, we added more export options: JSON, Markdown, Mermaid diagrams, and stories.

But Stately Studio has bigger ambitions than just being a suite of devtools for XState. We’ve frequently heard that these state diagrams are an important source of truth for critical app logic, serving as documentation for the entire team that stays up-to-date with your code. But a reliable source of truth for app logic is a need for all apps, not just those that use state machines directly.

That’s why we’re so excited to release Stately Studio 2.0, which aims to meet developers where they are, no matter which libraries, frameworks, or even languages they use. There are many benefits to modeling app logic with state diagrams and the actor model, and we want to enable developers to take advantage of those benefits to build more robust, feature-rich, and maintainable app logic faster.