Wang Xizhi’s calligraphy influenced his descendants. His son Xianzhi is good at cursive calligraphy; Ningzhi is good at cursive calligraphy; Huizhi is good at writing in cursive script. If you perform good deeds in cursive writing; if you offer them, you will be called a "little sage". Huang Bosi's "Dongguan Xu Lun" says: "Wang's four calligraphy works of Ning, Cao, Hui and Huan were passed down together with Zijing's calligraphy. They all have family styles, but their styles are different. Ning's calligraphy has its rhyme, and Cao's calligraphy has its own style. Its style, its emblem, its power, its glory, its appearance, and its origin." Afterwards, the descendants of Wang's family continued to pass on their calligraphy. Wu Zetian tried to ask for Wang Xizhi's book, and Wang Xizhi's ninth great-grandson Wang Fangqing submitted ten volumes of the writings of twenty-eight people from the eleventh generation to his great-grandfather, and compiled them into "Long Live Tongtian Tie". In the Southern Dynasties, the Qi kings Sengqian, Wang Ci and Wang Zhi were all descendants of the royal family and had Dharma books recorded. Shi Zhiyong was the seventh grandson of Xi. He passed down the family method wonderfully and was a famous calligrapher in the Sui and Tang Dynasties. During the war, his descendants were in chaos and their family tree was lost. They were distributed in Shenyang, Helen and other places. It is now known that his descendants include Wang Qingkai, Wang Xiaodan and others.