Launch HN: JSX Tool (YC F25) – A Browser Dev-Panel IDE for React
2 hours ago
Hi HN, We’re Jamie & Dan, building JSX Tool (https://jsxtool.com) a new inspector/dev panel IDE that allows you to navigate to any line of your React project’s JSX with just a click and a command click to explore your render stack.
Demo video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JIIXvN7vhrs
I’ve been writing React code for nearly a decade. Since I first saw source maps in the days of Babel and Redux, I’ve always wanted to be able to edit my code from the source maps. I’ve also always wanted to be able to inspect my JSX like it was HTML.
Last year, I found my first real use of AI was taking ad-hoc CSS changes in the Chrome element inspector, pasting them into ChatGPT, and asking for the equivalent in Tailwind. I’d then paste those changes into my React TSX files.
I wanted to streamline this process but came to the conclusion that to do so I needed to build a JSX inspector. I had to write a custom AST parser to create a mapping between the JSX and HTML. So I hacked on an inspector for a couple of months that connected JSX to the DOM in both directions.
The next feature was adding a CSS editor, like the one in the browser inspectors but for JSX. Unlike styling a piece of HTML I decided that any in memory style edits to a React fiber should be globally applied, as if you had tweaked that line of code in your codebase.
Finally, I was able to add the two AI features I really wanted: (1) prompt for in-memory styles for when I was pixel tweaking, and (2) save those temporary changes back to my codebase in the convention of the codebase I was working in.
To accomplish talking to the filesystem from the Chrome extension I built a little local server that mounts from the root of your project and allows the extension to send file-system commands back to your project root. We named this the “Dev Server”. (Note: You can fully use us as a JSX inspector without this server installed.)
After all that, I found that to convert myself as a user I needed it to be a pretty fully functional IDE. I needed vim bindings, I needed a typechecker, I needed auto-complete, I needed a linter, I needed code search and I needed a proper file explorer. Fortunately we were able to take advantage of the dev-server architecture we had stumbled onto in order to add an LSP server and Rip Grep. At this point, after months of dog fooding, I use JSX Tool for almost all of my website edits.
We’re still rough around the edges for mobile but we’re working on that.
All of the IDE stuff not involving AI is free and works fine without AI. We let you get a taste of the prompting stuff for free but apply some rate limits.
The extension itself is not open source but the dev server with the LSP is. It’s a great foundation if you want to build any sort of in-browser IDE and it's nearly React agnostic. Building the dev server was a big undertaking so I’d love to see someone fork it and find value in it.
In the future we want to start adding things that we are in a position to take advantage of over something like Cursor, such as letting AI give you code suggestions for runtime exceptions or work with the network logs. We think that the convenience of having your IDE in the dev panel gives us a leg up in convenience and workflow context.
Anyway, regardless of how you feel about AI coding, I wanted to make something that was useful with or without AI. We’d love it if you gave it a spin and we want to share anything we can about the technical side of the product that you might find interesting.
Surprised by all the hostility in the comments: if this tool actually works as described in the video, you've created a whole new generation of dev tool with JSX Tool!
Me too. I know HN doesn't love YC companies but I was a little shocked.
I swear it isn't vaporware but there's only one way to find out.
There are definitely rough edges, we are after all a 2 man band but I don't ship things that don't work and it's admittedly not done great with older versions of React. You should try it though!
Sorry, just trying to understand.
Are you saying you invented hot reload? And a dev tools css editor?
I am confused, because the ability to edit code and have the page update instantly exists with Vite, and next.js, and a bunch of other frameworks. It’s janky at times but good enough for most - and your edits are in your repo ready to commit. And browser CSS inspectors are really great. And there’s the React DevTools if you need to see props & component hierarchy.
Can you explain the value add over all these free things we already have?
> Are you saying you invented hot reload?
I'm not saying that, no. We are super dependent upon HMR servers from Vite/Next.
We made the ability to write back from your dev panel to your filesystem and made a JSX inspector. As far as I know these are not things supported by either Next or Vite.
> And browser CSS inspectors are really great
I couldn't agree more. I agree so much that we wanted to make one so that you could do the same to JSX as you can do to HTML.
> Can you explain the value add over all these free things we already have?
You should watch the demo video!
Interesting that this is now a venture-scale company, according to YC.
Right? There are at least 3 years that I don't get impressed by any Launch HN.
I'm a bit confused by the marketing verbiage and tool name. Is this going to target React only, or will it (eventually) support other solutions which use JSX, such as SolidJS?
It's a bit of an aspirational name. For now it's just React, but we hope to get to support other frameworks that use JSX when we have more bandwidth!
Pretty cool project! I love to see progress on the UX of how we write and manage code.
My honest feedback to you here is, this isn’t very valuable by itself as a local dev tool. Make it so it can be run targeting a git repository with live preview and deployment to a real environment and you may have something much better!
Take a look at Theia IDE, maybe you could find a bridge to do that?
Good luck on the launch!
You seriously don't think anyone develops locally in 2025?
Gotta respectfully disagree here but yeah, I definitely understand the remote workflow use case and why some folks want that.
I think if you're building something that is targeting designers that is the way to go.
Thanks for checking it out though!
How are you planning to acquire customers?
Is this sponsored by yc?
Who are the target audience?
Are the target audience companies or businesses or individuals?
Congratulations
> How are you planning to acquire customers?
We haven't gotten much further than just launching and praying.
> Is this sponsored by yc?
I mean we're a YC portfolio company, so sort of I guess. I used to work at YC, so I suppose YC has been sponsoring me for a while now.
> Who are the target audience?
React developers
> Are the target audience companies or businesses or individuals?
Both, I hope. We definitely went more along the lines of supporting individual developers spiritually but there is no reason it shouldn't work if you have colleagues.
> Congratulations
<3 Thanks so much!