Stitch Prompt Guide

Thanks it helps me very much

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Things not working despite multiple attempts with a different wording

  • add a checkbox for the values under the “Enabled” column in the table
  • the values under the “Approvals” column must be centered horizontally

But still quite useful to create a PoC for a non UI specialist

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insightful, thank you for sharing :slightly_smiling_face:

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Each time I instruct it to modify a single screen in the figma, it will output only that screen, and all the other generated screens are lost. Any ideas how to fix this?

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Is there a way to save general parameters for the various requests: button type, color scheme, etc., so that you don’t have to redefine them for each project?

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Hi guys,
Thanks for sharing the prompt guide—really helpful! I’ve been experimenting with Stitch recently and, while I think the tool is already showing great potential, I wanted to share a bit of feedback that might help improve the user experience when working on multi-screen apps.

At the moment, when you generate multiple screens and ask for adjustments, Stitch tends to show only one screen at a time. This can make it a bit difficult to manage changes across a broader UI.

A suggestion: it would be fantastic if each screen generated could be organised into a sort of folder structure or sub-chat. For example, let’s say I ask Stitch to help me create a fitness app and it generates several screens. The main chat could summarise all the screens (like a dashboard), while each screen would live in its own sub-thread or section. That way, I could tweak each screen independently without losing context, and the main chat could focus on app-wide changes like themes, fonts, or components.

I think this kind of structure could really help manage complexity more intuitively—especially as projects grow.

Keep up the great work, I’m looking forward to seeing how Stitch evolves!

Cheers :clinking_beer_mugs:,
Andrea

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It gives same design for any request. It get’s only structural instruction and ignores the style instructions at all

Is anyone else having significantly more success with the Standard model?

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total lack of understanding.

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Thank you for telling me about Stitch! It is so nice and great! I am experimenting with it right now! Amazing! Thank you! <33

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awasome :victory_hand: Thanks to.. Let it be created

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Thanks for the detailed Stitch prompt guide! The tip on making one big change at a time really helped me improve my workflow. Check it out here:

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Hey @draftin Thanks for flagging this, internal team put out a new release that has a lot of performance and reliability fixes as well as the main big change which allows you to freely arrange and organize your generated screens on an infinite canvas, providing a more flexible and intuitive workspace.
Keep generating creative designs with stitch and let us know with any issue or feedback.

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This is super helpful thanks for breaking it down so clearly. I really like the emphasis on iterating screen by screen with small, specific changes; it mirrors how good product design usually works in practice. The “set the vibe with adjectives” tip is especially powerful since it helps keep consistency across the whole app. Curious, have you found teams get better results starting broad and narrowing down, or diving into detailed prompts right away?

Hey @Deniel_carter Welcome to the community and thanks for sharing you feedback.
We have already filed a bug for the same, internal team is looking into it and we’re trying to make Stitch better and better with new updates. Thanks for the concern, keep posting and keep using Stitch.

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I mainly use Switch for enhancing website design on my business site — [neefox] (neefox). It really helps me create a smoother and more engaging experience for visitors.

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Hey @Deniel_carter thanks for your feedback, we’re happy to hear that Stitch is helping you in enhancing your website design. Keep using, keep posting.

Thank you, sir, for the guidance

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is there any way to apply predefined rules to the stitch.

Hi @Vincent_Nallatamby,

I’ve been using Stitch in experimental mode and found it to be more accurate than standard mode. However, the current restrictions — such as export to Figma being disabled and the background code being read-only — make it difficult to deliver high-quality designs.

It’s relatively easy to fix minor bugs by copying the code into another AI assistant (like ChatGPT), which then generates clean and bug-free code. But the process stops there because I can’t fully customize the background HTML due to the read-only limitation.

My suggestion for the Stitch team is to:

  1. Allow editing of background HTML (remove read-only restriction).
  2. Enable export to Figma for both experimental and standard modes.
  3. Fix the “download design” feature, since it currently doesn’t work.

This would greatly improve workflow and design quality.

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