Jigloo
Instead of writing useState or onClick handlers, you drag "Logic Rails" onto the canvas. Want a modal to pop up after a successful form submit? You drag a line from the form's onSuccess pin to the Modal's show pin. No code. No broken promises.
Jigloo ignores absolute positioning. Everything lives in a Flexbox-like cage. You set constraints (e.g., "This image is always 20% of the parent width" or "This footer sticks to the bottom unless content pushes it"). The preview renders instantly for mobile, tablet, and desktop. The "Aha!" Moment I spent 45 minutes building a simple weather dashboard. I pulled an API endpoint (yes, Jigloo has a native REST fetcher), mapped the JSON keys to text fields, and added a loading spinner.
In Figma or Sketch, a "button" is just a rectangle with text. In Jigloo, every component comes with built-in states: Default , Hover , Click , Disabled , and Loading . You don't animate these; you just toggle them. jigloo
Is it perfect? No. The collaboration features are laggy, and it chokes on huge datasets. But for v1, it changes the calculus of building web apps.
Enter .
Here is how it actually works:
I have written this as a "Launch Announcement / First Look" style post, assuming Jigloo is a (mixing UI design, wireframing, and low-code logic). Title: Stop Wireframing. Start Jiglooing: The Visual Tool That Thinks Like a Developer Instead of writing useState or onClick handlers, you
Have you tried a visual programming tool before? Let me know below.