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The Evolution of Syncfusion Agentic UI Builder with Agent Skills

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The Evolution of Syncfusion UI Builder with Agent Skills

TL;DR: The latest Syncfusion Agentic UI Builder introduces embedded Syncfusion Agent Skills that help AI generate more organized UIs within the project. By grounding generation on the available Syncfusion component intelligence, developers can reduce post-generation cleanup and accelerate UI realization.

AI-assisted development has rapidly changed how developers build application UI. Modern coding assistants can generate layouts, dashboards, forms, and data experiences in seconds using natural-language prompts.

But as AI-generated UI becomes part of real-world enterprise processes, developers increasingly expect more than isolated snippets or visual scaffolding. They need generated UIs that are structured, framework-aware, responsive, maintainable, and ready for integration into actual applications.

That is the direction driving the latest evolution of Syncfusion® Agentic UI Builder.

The newest release introduces embedded Syncfusion Agent Skills, a project-aware architecture designed to help AI generate more uniform, enterprise-focused interfaces using locally available Syncfusion component intelligence.

This evolution builds on the earlier orchestration capabilities of the UI Builder experience and enhances how AI understands, configures, and composes Syncfusion-powered app interfaces directly inside the developer pipeline.

The result is a more streamlined path from prompt to usable UI with improved consistency, reduced setup effort, and a smoother refinement experience for development teams.

Why enterprise UI generation requires more than snippets

While AI tools can quickly generate UI fragments, enterprise applications demand a much higher level of completeness and reliability.

The challenge is not generating UI, it’s making it work correctly within a real app context.

Enterprise interfaces must handle:

  • Complex layouts that adapt across devices,
  • Accurate and complete feature configuration,
  • Cohesive integration with app architecture,
  • Accessibility and compliance requirements, and
  • Long-term maintainability as the app evolves.

In practice, developers often spend significant time bridging the gap between generated output and production-ready UI. This includes fixing incomplete configurations, aligning layouts, wiring data interactions, and ensuring consistency across the application.

For example, a generated dashboard may include visual elements like charts or grids, but still require additional work to ensure:

  • Components are fully configured and functional,
  • Layout behavior remains consistent across screen sizes,
  • Features are properly integrated with the app, and
  • UI patterns align with project standards.

This gap between generated snippets and usable app interfaces is where most development effort is still spent and where improvements in AI-assisted UI generation make the biggest impact.

Introducing embedded Syncfusion Agent Skills

The latest Syncfusion UI Builder introduces embedded Syncfusion Agent Skills that provide locally available implementation guidance within the project environment.

Think of these skills as verified instruction packs that help AI understand how Syncfusion components should be configured and organized inside real applications.

Each skill can include:

  • Component APIs,
  • Setup guidance,
  • Required imports,
  • Feature configuration references,
  • Framework-specific patterns,
  • Accessibility recommendations, and
  • Layout composition guidance.

When UI Builder generates interfaces containing components such as DataGrid, Charts, Scheduler, Navigation Drawer, or Forms, the relevant Syncfusion Component Skills are automatically applied during generation.

This helps developers receive more cohesive UI scaffolding with minimized rework cycles.

How Syncfusion Agentic UI Builder has evolved

Earlier versions of Syncfusion UI Builder focused heavily on runtime coordination to help AI understand component behavior during generation.

That coordination model helped establish the foundation for AI-assisted Syncfusion UI generation.

As adoption expanded, teams increasingly looked for:

  • More project-aware generation,
  • Stronger customization capabilities,
  • Deeper alignment with internal standards, and
  • More streamlined local development experiences.

The addition of Agent Skills further evolves the architecture by bringing implementation guidance directly into the project environment.

This enables generation that is:

  • More grounded in the project context,
  • Easier to customize, and
  • Better aligned with production-scale applications.

Rather than changing the developer experience conceptually, the updated architecture enhances how UI Builder supports AI-assisted UI generation at scale.

Architecture comparison

Aspect  Earlier Runtime Retrieval Model  Skill-Based UI Builder 
Component intelligence source External services  Local embedded skills 
API resolution Runtime fetch  Local skill grounding 
Enterprise compatibility  Environment dependent  Improved
Debugging effort Higher  Reduced
MCP-based architecture
MCP-based architecture
Embedded Agent Skills-based architecture
Embedded Agent Skills-based architecture

How the new architecture works

The evolved Syncfusion Agentic UI Builder architecture uses the available component skills during generation.

High-level flow

Developer Prompt

UI Builder Agent

Syncfusion Component Skills

Local Skill Definitions

Component Mapping

Generated Enterprise UI

Instead of resolving all component intelligence dynamically during generation, UI Builder can now use project-level skills available within the workspace.

This helps improve:

  • Generation uniformity,
  • Adaptability across devices,
  • Reliability,
  • Customization flexibility, and
  • Enterprise readiness.

What developers can build faster?

With the evolved architecture, Syncfusion UI Builder can scaffold more complete app UIs with significantly less manual setup.

You can quickly generate:

  • SaaS admin dashboards,
  • Analytics workspaces,
  • Reporting systems,
  • Approval workflows,
  • CRUD management portals,
  • Responsive forms, and
  • Data-heavy business applications.

Instead of manually assembling layouts, charts, grids, filters, themes, and navigation patterns, teams can generate production-ready UI foundations from natural-language prompts.

This allows developers to spend more time building product functionality and less time assembling repetitive UI infrastructure.

Building UI with Syncfusion Agentic UI Builder

Install the Agent Package Manager (APM) in your environment. Getting started is quick and requires only a simple installation through APM.

apm install syncfusion/react-ui-builder -t copilot

Teams can adjust the target environment based on their preferred AI-assisted development environment, including Copilot, Cursor, Claude, and Syncfusion Code Studio.

After installation, the UI Builder agent and Syncfusion Component Skills are added to the workspace. From there, you can generate interfaces within the AI chat experience using conversational prompts.

Example prompt

Design a modern SaaS admin dashboard with a collapsible sidebar navigation, KPI summary cards, interactive charts, a sortable data grid, responsive layouts, dark mode support, and accessible UI interactions.

What UI Builder automatically handles

Once the prompt is submitted, Agentic UI Builder can automatically:

  • Select appropriate Syncfusion components,
  • Apply relevant component skills,
  • Configure required features,
  • Apply responsive layouts, and
  • Generate integration-ready UI scaffolding.

Developers receive a more cohesive UI foundation ready for refinement and integration.

Building a complete dashboard using UI Builder
Building a complete dashboard using UI Builder

What changes with the evolved UI Builder experience

Traditional AI UI generation Syncfusion UI Builder
Disconnected snippets Cohesive layouts
Manual configuration refinement Structured component setup
Repeated prompting cycles More stable generation
Manual module integration Guided feature wiring
Layout inconsistencies Design-consistent UI
Additional cleanup effort Streamlined refinement
Higher stabilization effort before integration Faster transition from prototype to usable application UI

Because generation is grounded using Syncfusion Component Skills, teams can move more efficiently from prototype generation toward usable application scaffolding.

Works across the Syncfusion ecosystem

Syncfusion UI Builder supports multiple frameworks and platforms across the Syncfusion ecosystem.

Framework / SDK Installation command GitHub
React apm install Syncfusion/react-ui-builder -t copilot React UI Builder
Angular apm install Syncfusion/angular-ui-builder -t copilot Angular UI Builder
Blazor apm install Syncfusion/blazor-ui-builder -t copilot Blazor UI Builder
.NET MAUI apm install Syncfusion/maui-ui-builder -t copilot MAUI UI Builder
WPF apm install Syncfusion/wpf-ui-builder -t copilot WPF UI Builder
WinForms apm install Syncfusion/winforms-ui-builder -t copilot WinForms UI Builder
WinUI apm install Syncfusion/winui-ui-builder -t copilot WinUI UI Builder

Frequently Asked Questions

What are Syncfusion Agent Skills?

Syncfusion Agent Skills are locally installed guidance packages that help coding agent generate more accurate and framework-aware Syncfusion component implementations directly inside the project workspace.

How is Syncfusion Agentic UI Builder different from traditional AI coding assistants?

Unlike general-purpose coding assistants that primarily generate isolated snippets, Syncfusion Agentic UI Builder focuses on generating structured application interfaces with guided component configuration, responsive layouts, and integrated UI composition.

Do I need prior experience with Syncfusion components to work with Agentic UI Builder?

No. Agentic UI Builder automatically applies component guidance, APIs, modules, and configuration references using Syncfusion Component Skills.

Does UI Builder generate production-ready applications?

UI Builder accelerates the path to production-ready UI scaffolding by generating structured, well-configured interfaces. Developers should still review and validate generated output before deployment.

Which IDEs and tools are supported in Agentic UI Builder?

UI Builder works with AI-assisted environments that support agent skills, including VS Code, Cursor, Syncfusion Code Studio, and similar AI-powered IDE experiences.

AI UI generation is evolving

Thanks for reading! AI-assisted UI development is entering a phase where generated interfaces are expected to be structurally complete, responsive, maintainable, and ready for real application environments.

The latest evolution of Syncfusion Agentic UI Builder is designed for that shift. By introducing embedded Syncfusion Agent Skills, UI Builder helps developers generate more integration-ready app UI directly from natural-language prompts.

Whether building dashboards, analytics systems, SaaS platforms, or internal business apps, teams can spend less time assembling UI infrastructure and more time delivering product functionality.

Explore Syncfusion UI Builder and experience a more streamlined approach to AI-assisted UI generation.

Need help? Reach out via our support forum support portal, or feedback portal. We’re always happy to assist you!

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alvinashcraft
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Challenge accepted: controlling Teams from my Stream Deck again

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Microsoft has unfortunately deprecated the Teams integration APIs — the same ones that let apps like the official Stream Deck Teams plugin control Teams from the outside. One day my nice meeting buttons just… stopped working. Annoying? Absolutely. But also: challenge accepted.

StreamDeckButtonsSample

After a bit of tinkering, I landed on a solution that works near perfectly, and honestly, I kind of love how hacky it is.

Here's the whole trick:

  • A set of gorgeous icons from Vivre Motion.
  • AutoHotkey v2 installed to run the logic.
  • A tiny script — teams-hotkey.ahk — that finds the live Teams meeting window and fires a keyboard shortcut at it.
  • Each Stream Deck button just runs that script and passes in the right shortcut.

That's it. Mute, camera, raise hand, hang up, and share all work great. A couple of things don't (accept/decline call, background blur, closed captions, and the meeting reaction emojis — those simply have no keyboard shortcut). I've documented exactly what works and what doesn't, so there are no surprises.

I even added a few quality-of-life buttons around it: a sun button to toggle my three Elgato key lights, a "hang up and turn off the lights" multi-action (because I always forget), a lock-the-computer button, timers, and a quick launch for Windows Terminal.

I cleaned the whole thing up into a small repo so you can grab it, copy it, and tweak it for your own setup. It's MIT-licensed — go wild:

github.com/noopman/Stream-Deck-setup

The icons aren't mine to hand out, so I credit and link Vivre Motion in the repo rather than bundling them — go support them, the icon set is lovely.

Geeky? Oh yes. But sometimes the best fix for a rug-pull is rolling your own. If you give it a spin or improve on it, I'd love to hear about it!


This weblog is owned by Magnus Martensson noopman.
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alvinashcraft
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One prompt, four (sub)agents, and ninety seconds to get a working app

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I’m been thinking a lot about agent teams. You know, a set of AI agents that work together towards a goal. You might implement this within a single agent harness (see Garry Tan’s gstack for Claude Code) or with an orchestrator for multiple harnesses (see Google’s Scion project). I’ve been doing agent-at-a-time coding work thus far, but figured it was time to dive into more multi-agent workflows. The subagents natively built into Google Antigravity 2.0 and Antigravity CLI gave me the push.

Why use subagents at all? Can’t I just use one coding agent to run through my work? Don’t we reach decision fatigue faster because of the coordination overhead? Yes, the engineering work shifts from more sequential human tasks to assigning and reviewing the work of multiple AI agents. There’a tax, no doubt. But there are benefits to deconstructing the work in a way that an agent team can tackle it. You limit the change surface (by giving each agent a persona, MCPs, and skills to address an isolated piece of work), consume fewer tokens (by not processing the entire context for all tasks), and go faster (by parallelizing work that tolerates it).

Sound intimidating? It’s felt that way to me. But Claude Code and Antigravity CLI make it less scary. Let’s talk about Google Antigravity. This agent-first harness (used via a desktop app, CLI, or IDE) provides out-of-the-box support for pre-built subagents (e..g browser and research), creating custom subagents, communicating between subagents, and lifecycle management of subagents.

I spent last weekend playing around with prompts to create an agent team that could build a backend API, a corresponding frontend API, and some unit tests. To make this process go as fast as possible, I’m also basically doing YOLO mode where I let Antigravity run any terminal command and proceed without my intervention. Here’s the setup in the Antigravity desktop app.

So what’s the prompt? Here’s what I came up with.

Let's build a hotel room booking app for Seroter Hotels consisting of a Go backend API and a web frontend. 

First, launch the **Engineering Manager** agent to design the API and frontend, saving the design and a Mermaid diagram into an artifact called 'architecture.md'. 

Once the design is ready, launch three agents in parallel:
1. **Test Manager**: Write a simple API test plan and append it to 'architecture.md'.
2. **Backend Engineer**: Build a clean Go REST API with standard error handling based on the design.
3. **Frontend Engineer**: Build a responsive web UI using a simple CSS framework like Tailwind to interact with the API (skip UI testing).

As soon as the Test Manager finishes the plan, have them hand it off to the Backend Engineer, who reads the plan from 'architecture.md' and adds the Go tests to the code. After both engineers finish building, the Test Manager runs the tests. Finally, spin up both components and a browser so I can test the live app.

Let’s be clear. In real-life, you’d provide each subagent with significantly more context (tools, skills, data structures, persona characteristics) or trigger some back-and-forth so the subagent could gather a rich set of requirements from you. But this works to prove the point.

Here’s a video recording of the result, at 1.0x speed. It takes all of ninety seconds from when Antigravity starts working until the frontend and backend services are running. Below the video, I’ll deconstruct some key parts of the response.

Right after Antigravity got started, we saw the Implementation plan. This artifact defined each subagent and the sequence they would follow.

I steered work to a shared architecture.md file. When we view that, we see the decision log used by the agents.

As the subagents got to work, the main task list kept getting updated automatically.

Each subagent had its own context and workstream. Here, the backend agent records its implementation work.

It’s mesmerizing to watch the subagents start up and do their thing! On this right pane, you can see each subagent come up, printouts of each thing it’s doing, and finally when the root agent kills them off. I’m also able to track all the artifacts and any background tasks going on.

When it finished up, the main conversation recapped the final details and showed me how to access the app endpoints.

Because Antigravity knows how to work the Chrome browser, it also automatically launched a browser window and showed me the web front end. Looks great!

The Antigravity CLI supports virtually the same workflow.

I think it completed even faster than the desktop app! Same agent team. Same artifacts and workflow.

Pretty awesome. I’m sold. Download Google Antigravity, copy my prompt, make it better, try this for yourself. To me, building software has never been this fun.



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Introducing Mellum2: A 12B Mixture-of-Experts Model by JetBrains

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DuckDuckGo makes its ‘no-AI’ search engine easier to access as its traffic booms

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Alternative search engine DuckDuckGo launches 'no AI' web extensions for Chrome and Firefox users.
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Microsoft to unveil new AI models and Windows improvements at Build

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Text reads “BUILD” written in blocky, pixelated letters with Microsoft’s brand colors.

Microsoft is heading to San Francisco this week in a bid to win back developers at its Build conference. I've been attending Build since the days when Microsoft called it the Professional Developers Conference, and I can't remember a more pivotal moment. As Microsoft continues to reshuffle its entire business around AI, it's moving Build into a smaller, more intimate venue. Trust in Windows and GitHub is at an all-time low, and this is Microsoft's chance to reconnect with developers and outline the future.

Sources tell me that we'll hear about new AI models in Windows, a new reasoning model from Microsoft AI, and a Copilot "super app." But …

Read the full story at The Verge.

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