Sample plugins using the Figma + FigJam Plugin API docs.
To make a feature request, file a bug report, or ask a question about developing plugins, check out the available resources.
The resources you see here are example plugin samples meant for Figma plugin development and FIGMA PROVIDES THEM "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND. We don't promise they're perfect or will always work as you expect. We're not responsible for any problems you might experience from using them. It's up to you to check these samples out thoroughly and make sure they're safe and suitable for your needs before you use them. If something goes wrong, Figma won't be held responsible. If you keep using these samples, it means you're okay with these terms. FIGMA EXPLICITY DISCLAIMS ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, QUIET ENJOYMENT, AND NON-INFRINGEMENT AND ANY WARRANTIES ARISING OUT OF COURSE OF DEALING OR USAGE OF TRADE.
These plugins are written using TypeScript to take advantage of Figma's typed plugin API. Before installing these samples as development plugins, you'll need to compile the code using the TypeScript compiler. Typescript can also watch your code for changes as you're developing, making it easy to test new changes to your code in Figma.
To install TypeScript, first install Node.js. Then:
$ npm install -g typescript
Next install the packages that the samples depend on. Currently, this will only install the lastest version of the Figma typings file. Most of the samples will reference this shared typings file in their tsconfig.json
.
$ npm install
Now, to compile the Bar Chart sample plugin (for example):
$ cd barchart
$ tsc
Now you can import the Bar Chart plugin from within the Figma desktop app (Plugins > Development > Import plugin from manifest...
from the right-click menu)!
The code for each plugin is in code.ts
in that plugin's subdirectory. If a
plugin shows some UI, the HTML will be in ui.html
.
For example, the code for the Bar Chart sample plugin is in barchart/code.ts, and the HTML for its UI is in barchart/ui.html.
For plugins that have a UI, we recommend matching the style and behavior of Figma. Many other plugins follow this convention and it helps create consistency in the plugin experience for users as they use different plugins. Here's a few approaches that can help when styling your UI:
- Figma Plugin DS A lightweight UI library for styling Figma plugins.
- Create Figma Plugin UI - A library of production-grade Preact components that replicate the Figma editorโs UI design
The following sample plugins use the new FigJam node types (stickies, shapes with text, connectors, and stamps) and so work best in FigJam, i.e. with an editorType of 'figjam' in your manifest.json file.
This plugin will find all stamps close to a sticky and generate a tally of all the stamps (votes) next to a sticky on the page.
This plugin creates 5 ROUNDED_RECTANGLE
Shapes with Text nodes and adds a Connector node in between each of them.
The following sample plugins work in both Figma and FigJam.
You can create plugins that have conditional logic depending on whether they are run in Figma, or FigJam.
When this plugin runs in Figma, it opens a window to prompt the user to enter a number, and it will then create that many rectangles on the screen.
When this plugin runs in FigJam, it opens a window to prompt the user to enter a number, and it will then create that many ROUNDED_RECTANGLE
shapes with text nodes, and also adds a connector node in between each shape.
Takes a single text node selected by the user and creates a copy with the characters arranged in a circle.
Takes image fills in the current selection and inverts their colors.
This demonstrates:
- how to read/write images stored in a Figma document, and
- how to use
showUI
to access browser APIs.
This plugin will find links within a text node and create on canvas meta cards of an image, title, description and link based on the tags in the head of a webpage at the relative links.
Generates a fractal using circles.
Generates a triangle using vector paths.
Generates a bar chart given user input in a modal.
Computes a count of the nodes of each NodeType
in the current document.
Generates a pie chart given user input in a modal.
Searches for text in the document, given a query by the user in a modal.
This demonstrates:
- advanced message passing between the main code and the plugin UI,
- how to keep Figma responsive during long-running operations, and
- how to use the viewport API.
Allows drag-and-drop of a simple icon library from a modal to the canvas.
This demonstrates registering callbacks for drop events and communicating drop data from the plugin iframe.
Allows drag-and-drop of a simple icon library from a modal running an externally-hosted UI to the canvas.
This demonstrates registering callbacks for drop events and embedding drop data using the dataTransfer
object in the drop event.
Crops PNGs as they are dropped onto the canvas.
This demonstrates registering callbacks for drop events and reading bytes from dropped files.
An example of a plugin that allows you to author and save code snippets directly on nodes that will render in the inspect panel when the node is selected.
An example of a plugin for codegen
An example of a plugin configured to work in Figma design, Dev Mode inspect, and run codegen.
An example of a plugin that converts Figma styles to variables
An example of a plugin that imports and exports variables
A plugin to quickly go to any layer or page in the Figma file.
For more information on how to accept parameters as input to your plugin, take a look at this guide.
Resizes a selected shape. There are two submenus, allowing for absolute resizing and relative resizing.
For more information on how to accept parameters as input to your plugin, take a look at this guide.
Inserts an SVG icon into the canvas.
For more information on how to accept parameters as input to your plugin, take a look at this guide.
Example of how to use the text review API to suggest and flag changes while editing text nodes.
Generates a series of trivia questions taken from an external trivia API.
For more information on how to accept parameters as input to your plugin, take a look at this guide.
A very basic example of how to communicate between a UI and the Figma canvas using postMessage.
Finds the capital city of a country. This demonstrates:
- How to make network requests to populate parameter suggestions
For more information on how to accept parameters as input to your plugin, take a look at this guide.
Create rectangles! This demonstrates:
- Bundling plugin code using Webpack
- Using React with TSX
$ npm install
$ npm run build
esbuild and Webpack examples are great places to start if you are interested in bundling.
- Create Figma Plugin - A comprehensive toolkit for developing Figma plugins.
- Figma Plugin Boilerplate - A starter project for creating Figma Plugins with HTML, CSS (+ SCSS) and vanilla Javascript without any frameworks.
- Figsvelte - A boilerplate for creating Figma plugins using Svelte.
- Figplug - A small program for building Figma plugins. It offers all the things you need for most projects: TypeScript, React/JSX, asset bundling, plugin manifest generation, etc.
- Plugma - A CLI for simplifying creating plugins. It uses a local dev server for faster development and better debugging. Built with Vite, so it supports most frameworks, with more being added.
- Figma Kit - A set of React components for building Figma plugins.
- Figma Plugin Starter - A Figma plugin boilerplate with React, Vite and Reshaped
If you're hoping to emulate the look and feel of Figma UI in your plugins, check out our UI2 design system, or try Tom's Figma Plugin DS, a community-provided set of CSS and JavaScript files.