A new perspective for Gutenberg
After some testing, I have to admit, Cwicly is more professional than for everyone because of so many possibilities and fine-tuning it offers. To avoid being lost, you’d better know a bit of page logic and css, It won't be a solution for clients, and I may have to restrict some of the uses. Maybe a way to deal with this is to have a option to limit the settings for editor roles.
Outside this, as far as I know, it’s one of the first, if not the first, complete solution for the upcoming FSE. I don't mean that other Gutenberg solutions can't do the job, it's only that Cwicly was built with FSE in mind, not as a collection of blocks, if I correctly understood the concept.
Ok, there is still room for improvements, but let's be honest, the idea is great and it's already very functional.
Outside the large number of settings, including animations, I can see in the current version 3 strong points:
- acf pro included
- conditions for css (and thus a way to trigger css animations)
- names for id and pseudo-classes to have not only clean and readable blocks but again a possibility to fine-tune elements
I feel this way of rethinking Gutenberg could really be something highly relevant very soon. The roadmap is very promising too, with Woocommerce features coming soon.
All in all, this new team, very responsive by the way, has a professional oriented product that is both different and interesting.
Louis_Cwicly
May 9, 2024Hi there Percipi,
Wow, thank you for the very concise and constructive overview of Cwicly. I think you sum up the important key features we wanted to bring to Gutenberg.
Yes, we're aware we need to improve client accessibility, and we are figuring out the best ways to make Cwicly agreeable and efficient for every kind of user.
Exciting things coming up! Thanks for your support and glad you're with us!
Best,
Louis @ Cwicly