FigMayo automatically converts Figma libraries into documentation websites. Styles, components and notes are instantly published, eliminating the need for manually creating and maintaining design system docs for your team.
@narendra_solanki Great question. It's as simple as republishing your site. We'll then update with all the changes from your Figma lib. This means it's super easy to keep everything in sync - no more managing changes in two places.
@drop_wallet That sounds incredibly efficient and user-friendly! The ability to seamlessly sync changes from Figma directly into the documentation without manual intervention is a huge time-saver. It's great to hear that FigMayo addresses one of the major pain points in design documentation. Are there any additional features in the pipeline that further streamline the process or enhance the user experience? Looking forward to seeing how FigMayo evolves!
@narendra_solanki We have lots of new features on the way. We're excited to launch our plugin soon which will let you attach additional documentation to components from Figma (link any frame to a component which will open in a modal).
We also have support for variables coming soon, a changelog that surfaces updates from Figma AND a we have a prototype up and running to generate your components in code, so you can play with actual CSS/html. Roll on next year!
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Congratulations on your launch! FigMayo is looking great!
@stephanie_hubbard Thanks, would love you to try it and give us some feedback.
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Thanks for hunting this! This is something I've been trying to solve for a while now. I'm excited to try this out and let you know how it goes. Keep up the great work!
Hello everybody!
We're over the moon to introduce FigMayo to the PH community! Our small but passionate team has put in plenty of coffee, sweat, and maybe a few tears to reach this Version 1 milestone.
The challenge of design system documentation has haunted us from tiny startups to behemoth enterprises. We've tried third-party tools, only to find them time-consuming and frustrating. We'd spend more time laying out pages than improving the design system itself. After much moaning about this to my co-founder, our lightbulb moment arrived, and FigMayo was born (possibly while I was snacking on mayo).
The concept is simple: most of the essential documentation already exists in Figma. We just needed a way to package it in a user-friendly format for our entire team, from product to engineering and marketing. By turning Figma assets into a website, we avoid the headache of using another tool. This also encourages better organization and hygiene in Figma, as what you see in Figma is what you get on your site.
We let you pull in colors, type, effects, components, notes, links and let you add in additional documentation too (this will be expanding massively soon). We also let you combine multiple libraries into a single site - this has the advantage of unifying design systems that are split out across multiple libraries.
And that's just the beginning! We've got a ton of exciting features in the pipeline, including variables, a dedicated plugin, changelog, and we're eager to dive into development now that the foundation is set. Our core mission remains the same: let designers focus on Figma, and we'll handle the presentation for you and your team. We can’t wait to hear your feedback.
Cheers
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