This product was not featured by Product Hunt yet. It will not be visible on their landing page and won't be ranked (cannot win product of the day regardless of upvotes).
Open an unfamiliar folder and CodeFlow unfolds it into an interactive node graph you can actually read — a semantic map grouped by feature, or a physical map ranked by importance. Change the flow on the canvas — add, delete, reconnect, annotate — and it rewrites the real files to match, every change shown as a line-by-line diff you Keep or Undo.
Every function, drawn as a flow.
Drill into any function and CodeFlow lays out its real control flow — diamond nodes for branches, loop markers, and I/O. It even lifts framework routes into entry points: Flask, FastAPI, Django decorators, Express app.get, React Router.
Click a node. Ask what it does.
Every node opens an AI explanation in a side chat. Point it at your own key through a Direct API agentic loop — OpenAI, Anthropic, or a local Ollama — or drive an external CLI agent instead: Codex, Claude, Antigravity.
Edit the graph. Keep the diff.
This is the half most tools skip. Reconnect or delete nodes on the canvas and CodeFlow computes the affected scope, hands the real source to the AI, and shows exactly what changed — line by line. You press Keep or Undo. Dragging a node only tidies the layout; it never touches code.
The AI can touch your files. The disk is the judge.
Letting an AI rewrite your source only works if you can trust the boundary. CodeFlow never trusts what the CLI prints — it snapshots the whole repo first, then judges by what is actually on disk.
Six themes. Eight parsers. One 12 MB file.
No installer, no bundled Chromium, no telemetry. Tauri 2 runs on the OS-native webview, so the macOS build stays around 12 MB — download from the blog, run it, done. Read the UI in six languages, in whichever of six themes you like.
Being able to scope the graph to just the files in a git branch would be huge for reviewing PRs, since right now it always shows the whole repo. A dropdown to filter by branch or commit, with the diff view tied to those changes specifically, would make Codeflow feel built right into the review workflow.
The diff view keeps things honest, which I really appreciate — too many tools hide what they actually changed. Dragging nodes around to restructure a folder felt weirdly satisfying, almost like organizing a whiteboard.
About Codeflow on Product Hunt
“tree-sitter, CodeMirror, no install”
Codeflow was submitted on Product Hunt and earned 0 upvotes and 3 comments, placing #154 on the daily leaderboard. Open an unfamiliar folder and CodeFlow unfolds it into an interactive node graph you can actually read — a semantic map grouped by feature, or a physical map ranked by importance. Change the flow on the canvas — add, delete, reconnect, annotate — and it rewrites the real files to match, every change shown as a line-by-line diff you Keep or Undo.
Codeflow was featured in Analytics (172.8k followers), Text Editors (16.8k followers) and No-Code (5.8k followers) on Product Hunt. Together, these topics include over 21.7k products, making this a competitive space to launch in.
Who hunted Codeflow?
Codeflow was hunted by Minwoo Kim. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
Want to see how Codeflow stacked up against nearby launches in real time? Check out the live launch dashboard for upvote speed charts, proximity comparisons, and more analytics.