This month, the documentation brings improvements to some of our framework-specific guides, a big overhaul of the core visual editing documentation, and an assortment of platform updates to improve the user experience.
We’ve rewritten our core visual editing guides. For anyone using a supported framework like Next.js, this won’t change much. If, however, your aim is to set up visual editing on an unsupported framework, or just learn more about the underlying mechanisms, these new docs should help. There are now code-heavy guides on all major parts of the system, as well as an end-to-end example in Node.js and TypeScript.
Our existing Astro content now lives in the docs. You can find the new Astro section here, as well as a new visual editing guide.
Articles can now include tabbed content groups, letting you compare alternatives side-by-side and switch between them in place. Each tab supports rich text, code blocks, callouts, and images.

A new actions dropdown next to every article gives you one-click options to copy the article as Markdown, open it in ChatGPT or Claude for follow-up questions, and install the Sanity MCP server directly in Cursor or VS Code.

Property descriptions in API and reference tables now render through the modern Portable Text pipeline, fixing an assortment of rendering bugs in older table content.
A new Sanity Function automatically publishes generated reference documentation for many of our libraries, keeping API reference pages in sync with library releases without manual republish steps.
Fetched April 30, 2026
Here&x27;s a roundup of new and revamped documentation, plus a small improvement to the docs site itself. New and updated docs GROQ feature…
