Can’t find what you need in the library? Build it yourself. Open the chat, describe what you want in everyday language, and the Deepspace agent creates it for you — no coding required.
Getting Started
When you first open the chat, you’ll see “What would you like to create?” along with a set of suggestions to get you going — things like a task tracker, an image gallery, or a dashboard. Click one to start, or type your own idea.
Some examples of what you can ask for:
- “Create a habit tracker where I can check off daily habits and see my streaks”
- “Build a simple invoice generator with line items and a total”
- “Make a widget that shows my upcoming calendar events for the week”
Deepspace Agent will think through what’s needed, ask clarifying questions if anything is unclear, and then build it.
For tips on getting the best results, see Tips for working with DeepSpace Agent.
Watch It Come Together
As the Deepspace agent builds, you can see its thinking process and what it’s working on. This is there for the curious — feel free to follow along, or just wait for the finished result. Either way works.
Refine Until It’s Right
Your first version doesn’t have to be perfect. Try out the widget, then ask for changes:
- “Make the buttons bigger”
- “Add a dark mode toggle”
- “Show a chart of my weekly progress”
- “Connect this to my Google Calendar”
Deepspace Agent remembers what you’ve built, so each request builds on the last. It’s a natural back-and-forth conversation — keep going until the widget is exactly what you want.
Your data is saved automatically. Anything you add to a widget — tasks, notes, settings — persists across sessions. You don’t need to ask the Deepspace agent to “add saving” or “make it persistent.”
Start from Something That Already Exists
You don’t have to start from zero. Pick a widget from the library, then ask the Deepspace agent to customize it:
- “Take this expense tracker and add categories”
- “Modify this dashboard to show weekly instead of daily data”
- “Add a search bar to this contact list”
Building on someone else’s work is often the fastest way to get what you need.
Widgets are flexible. They can:
- Store and display data — lists, tables, charts, forms (saved automatically)
- Connect to services — Google Calendar, Gmail, web search, AI models, and many more
- Talk to each other — widgets in your current space share the same data, so one widget can read what another writes
- Be deployed as websites — turn any widget into a standalone site at
yourapp.app.space
- Support real-time collaboration — multiple users can interact with the same widget simultaneously