u/heyarthix

▲ 13 r/WebdevTutorials+3 crossposts

Framer to React

Hello

I’ve spent the last 3 months going deep into how Framer works because this problem kept bothering me.

What started as curiosity slowly turned into an obsession 😅

I ended up building an automation around it that converts Framer sites into actual React code from just a Framer URL.

Not exports that still depend on Framer assets or platform links.

Real React code you can actually edit, build on, and own.

Design, structure, responsiveness, animations, interactions and the whole experience.

Still refining things before releasing because there are a lot of edge cases to handle, and I’d rather launch something solid than rushed.

I’ll start sharing examples soon (Framer → React comparisons, tutorials, how it works, etc.)

Forgot to introduce myself, I’m a software developer currently working on Singapore Government projects, so i am not a guy who doesn’t know a shit about coding😅

I will keep sharing the details on my social media platforms.

@heyarthix

Thank you

reddit.com
u/heyarthix — 1 day ago
▲ 0 r/nextjs

Spent the last ~3 months building something for a frustrating Problem

Hey everyone,

I’m a software developer currently working on Singapore Government projects.

Outside work, I spend most of my time building things that feel unnecessarily painful to solve.

For the last ~3 months, I’ve been obsessed with one problem:

Framer websites look incredible.

But rebuilding them into React for flexibility, ownership, client work, or customization?

Painful.

So I started building something.

The idea is simple:

Turn Framer websites into production-ready React code while preserving the original experience — structure, animations, responsiveness, interactions, and sections included.

No rebuilding sections manually.

No starting from scratch.

Paste a Framer site.

Get React.

The goal isn’t to “copy websites.”

The real value is ownership, flexibility, customization, learning, and understanding how beautiful modern experiences can actually be built in React, HTML, and CSS.

If you already own a Framer site — or want more control over what you’ve built — this becomes incredibly powerful.

I genuinely think this is one of the biggest frustrations around modern website builders.

Imagine how much faster beautiful, highly customized websites could be built when design and flexibility finally work together.

Still refining things, but what started as a side obsession has turned into something surprisingly powerful.

Curious:

Would something like this actually be useful for freelancers, agencies, or frontend developers here?

Building in public:

X / Threads / Instagram
@heyarthix

Also documenting the journey here:
r/arthix

reddit.com
u/heyarthix — 3 days ago

Spent the last ~3 months building something for a frustrating Problem

Hey everyone,

I’m a software developer currently working on Singapore Government projects.

Outside work, I spend most of my time building things that feel unnecessarily painful to solve.

For the last ~3 months, I’ve been obsessed with one problem:

Framer websites look incredible.

But rebuilding them into React for flexibility, ownership, client work, or customization?

Painful.

So I started building something.

The idea is simple:

Turn Framer websites into production-ready React code while preserving the original experience — structure, animations, responsiveness, interactions, and sections included.

No rebuilding sections manually.

No starting from scratch.

Paste a Framer site.

Get React.

The goal isn’t to “copy websites.”

The real value is ownership, flexibility, customization, learning, and understanding how beautiful modern experiences can actually be built in React, HTML, and CSS.

If you already own a Framer site — or want more control over what you’ve built — this becomes incredibly powerful.

I genuinely think this is one of the biggest frustrations around modern website builders.

Imagine how much faster beautiful, highly customized websites could be built when design and flexibility finally work together.

Still refining things, but what started as a side obsession has turned into something surprisingly powerful.

Curious:

Would something like this actually be useful for freelancers, agencies, or frontend developers here?

Building in public:

X / Threads / Instagram
@heyarthix

Also documenting the journey here:
r/arthix

reddit.com
u/heyarthix — 3 days ago