Non réclamés : ils travaillent à Sanity ?
Sanity est un cloud de contenu composable qui permet aux équipes de créer des expériences numériques incroyables à grande échelle. Il offre une collaboration en temps réel, une édition multi-utilisateurs en direct et un suivi des modifications. Les créateurs de contenu, les concepteurs et les développeurs peuvent se réunir tout en séparant le contenu de la présentation
( 1 )
| Solutions |
|
|---|---|
| Segment |
|
| Déploiement | Cloud/SaaS/Basé sur le Web |
| Assistance | 24h/7 et XNUMXj/XNUMX (représentant en direct), chat, e-mail/assistance, FAQ/forum, base de connaissances, assistance téléphonique |
| Formation | Documentation |
| Langues | Anglais |
Comparer Sanity avec d’autres outils populaires dans la même catégorie.
The authoring and developer experiences are fantastic and simple to set up and use, and I enjoy the dark mode
1. If the first field is a reference, it has a messy heading/title for the document. This requires customization. 2. Not easy to make a singleton; I would appreciate it if, in the schema, there is a possibility to add a key "singleton: true."
A static site that requires too much dynamic content. For our conference website, we had a lot of changes requested by the team, and sanity was the way to go for adding and removing content.
It's completely customizable to the experience you feel is best for your users. I love the scalability and editability. The fact that it also integrates seamlessy with deployment providers as well as other platforms is great.
Wish they had a few more templates for developers to utilize as a starting point, but I know they are working on it!
Sanity is replacing other dated content management systems on the market. They empower developers, creatives, and content editors to create ecosystems that are scalable and user-friendly.
Interestingly, the outstanding customizable schema layout saves my dev time. This is the perfect backend solution for a personal and mini blog project.
Sanity should be available on the self-hosting service. Also, I am worried about the storage limitations.
1. Time management 2. Easy to customize
I love how customisable it is as a cms, and integrating Sanity with Nuxt makes for a really powerful solution for websites. The module ecosystem for Sanity is great too!
For my current use case I honestly have no complaints whatsoever with regards to Sanity CMS.
Sanity allows me to craft a bespoke CMS for my clients with a clean interface and great ease of use.
Simplicity when creating schemas, the content leak is awesome.
not clear docs when it comes to migrate from other providers such as firebase
CMS, with sanity studio it became much easier to manage content
We use Sanity exclusively in our Gatsby projects because it can handle anything we throw at it. Clean interface, relatively low learning curve, highly customizable UX in those situations where it's needed.
Sanity enforces data standardization in its content lake... which is exactly what it *should* do, and I'm a fan, except that if you need or want to do quick and dirty data migration with simple import tools, this ain't no Wordpress (or insert more mass-targeted CMS name of your choice here). For projects requiring migration on anything more than a simple copy-paste or other manual operation, you're gonna have to master the Sanity API to make it happen.
Building websites on next-gen ("jamstack") platforms, moving on from the the messy world of monolithic tools like Wordpress and Drupal.
It's simple to use with NextJS hosted on Vercel.
PortableText took a while to figure out. I wish the docs had more information and examples.
It provides a content authoring environment for my blog content
Sanity has given me the power to create and public a simple admin interface for a local restauranteur, they can edit their menu quickly and efficiently even on mobile and a webhook calls for a rebuild of the site assets afterwards. Simplicity itself, and keeps things simple by allowing Google Auth so I can prevent them breaking things!
There's little to dislike about Sanity. It might be difficult to customize the admin interface if you're not into front end development. Learning to code the content hierarchy and types can take some effort.
I use Sanity with a Nuxt.js app and Cloudflare for a completely free CMS solution. It solves the problem of having a non-technical user be able to edit their menu "live" and have it show up on the website within a minute.
I used sanity for multiple projects now and I love it. Creating schemas, edit them in live mode, modify them with react and simple to explain to an product owner who has to modify data in the cms, creating queries with live feedback to check if they are correct, good documentation for groq and fast system apis. I would recommend every developer for sanity!
They only downside of sanity is, that they havent got an vosualized build tool to create complex groq queries. Its and try and error until it works. But honestly, its developers job to create them.
Its does solve the problem to create any database on a server which is available everytime. Sanity does this job for me, so the only thing I have to do, is fetching data from the api. It reduces so much time and headache, awesome.
Sanity has a great documentation making it a breeze to implement. The community built around the tool is amazing, there are tons of plugins for everything.
Creating new schemas is very verbose, so it might not be as friendly for beginners.
Sanity is used for pretty much all content in a large, multilingual website I work in daily.