How to Edit Your Website with AI Conversation — WindWalker Editing Guide
WindWalker's CWF (Content Workflow) feature lets you update your website with a single chat message. Here's how it works, illustrated with real conversation examples.
What Is CWF?
CWF (Content Workflow) is WindWalker's core AI editing feature. When you type an edit request in plain language, the AI analyzes which part of the website needs to change and applies it immediately.
In traditional web builders, you'd have to click the element you want to change, open a properties panel, and manually enter the new value. CWF replaces all of that with a single sentence like "Change the home page title to 'Start Now.'"
Real Conversation Examples
Example 1: Text Edit
Example 2: Color Change
Example 3: Add a Section
Example 4: Multi-page Edit
What You Can Edit
| Category | Editable Items | Example Command |
|---|---|---|
| Text | Headings, body text, button labels, descriptions | "Change the intro text to ~" |
| Color | Background, button, text color | "Change the background to white" |
| Structure | Add, remove, or reorder sections | "Add an FAQ section" |
| Multi-page | Edit content on specific pages | "On the pricing page, ~" |
| Lists | Add or edit feature list items, checklists | "Add ~ to the feature list" |
Limitations — Honestly
CWF doesn't solve everything. As of the current beta, here are the known limitations.
- Complex custom layouts (pixel-level positioning) are difficult to control precisely via chat
- Image uploads and gallery management require the separate UI
- External API integrations and database connections are outside the supported scope
- Highly complex custom animations
- Requesting too many changes at once may result in some being missed — step-by-step requests are recommended
Tips for Getting More Out of CWF
Saying "on the home page" or "on the pricing page" first helps the AI apply changes to the right place with higher accuracy.
Bundling many changes in one message can lead to some being missed. Splitting into "change the button color" and "update the heading" separately improves accuracy.
If the AI's change isn't quite right, just say "a bit larger" or "revert that" — it responds to follow-up feedback immediately.
Saying "hero section," "pricing table," or "footer" helps the AI find and edit the right element faster.