November–January Product Recap (v1.54–1.58)
This release cycle combines several closely related updates to Seatmap Pro, focused on three areas: stronger administration tools in the Editor, a more
For many ticketing teams, circular venues are where seat map quality is tested the hardest.
For many ticketing teams, circular venues are where seat map quality is tested the hardest. A map can look acceptable in static view, but once you start editing sections, assigning prices, or aligning rows across curved geometry, the gaps appear quickly.
That is exactly the problem Path-Based Transformation (PBT) solves in the Seatmap Editor.
Instead of forcing circular venues into straight section blocks, PBT allows sections to follow curved venue paths while keeping the operational side of the map intact. You get geometry that reflects the real venue shape, without moving to a separate editing model.
Circular venues create practical editing problems that are easy to underestimate:
In other words, the challenge is not only drawing a curved shape. The challenge is preserving consistent seat logic and editable structure while that shape changes over time.
PBT introduces a dedicated transformation mode for curved layouts.
It is not “just another slider,” and it is intentionally controlled:
This matters because circular editing fails fast when multiple transformations stack unpredictably. PBT avoids that by design.
Under the hood, PBT runs in two calculation phases:
This split is important for editing performance and stability. Heavy position math and boundary math are separated, so recalculation can stay focused when you move or align sections.
PBT also uses virtual edge points for row-boundary calculations.
In simple terms: it avoids “edge distortions” on curved rows where first/last real seats alone are not enough to build stable outlines and label padding.
A major practical challenge with advanced transformations is save/load consistency. PBT addresses this by storing the transformation state in a persistence-safe way and recalculating detailed metrics on load.
That means teams avoid stale geometry snapshots and can continue editing confidently after reload, import/export, or handoff between users.
PBT brings clear value in common production scenarios:
Path-Based Transformation makes circular venues feasible at production quality inside the Seatmap Editor. It improves shape fidelity, keeps editing predictable, and protects existing ticketing workflows from unnecessary complexity.
Circular venues are now practical to model in the Editor. Try them out today by signing up for a demo.
Our Winter Recap video covers a set of updates that all push in the same direction: less friction in day-to-day venue work.
This release cycle combines several closely related updates to Seatmap Pro, focused on three areas: stronger administration tools in the Editor, a more
Today we’re going to build a complete, production-ready multi-tier arena map in Seatmap Pro – the kind you’d actually sell tickets from.