back
loading skill details...
Comprehensive guide for creating software diagrams using Mermaid syntax. Use when users need to create, visualize, or document software through diagrams…
Mermaid Diagramming
Create professional software diagrams using Mermaid's text-based syntax. Mermaid renders diagrams from simple text definitions, making diagrams version-controllable, easy to update, and maintainable alongside code.
Core Syntax Structure
All Mermaid diagrams follow this pattern:
diagramType
definition content
Key principles:
First line declares diagram type (e.g., classDiagram, sequenceDiagram, flowchart)
Use %% for comments
Line breaks and indentation improve readability but aren't required
Unknown words break diagrams; parameters fail silently
Diagram Type Selection Guide
Choose the right diagram type:
Class Diagrams - Domain modeling, OOP design, entity relationships
Domain-driven design documentation
Object-oriented class structures
Entity relationships and dependencies
Sequence Diagrams - Temporal interactions, message flows
API request/response flows
User authentication flows
System component interactions
Method call sequences
Flowcharts - Processes, algorithms, decision trees
User journeys and workflows
Business processes
Algorithm logic
Deployment pipelines
Entity Relationship Diagrams (ERD) - Database schemas
Table relationships
Data modeling
Schema design
C4 Diagrams - Software architecture at multiple levels
System Context (systems and users)
Container (applications, databases, services)
Component (internal structure)
Code (class/interface level)
State Diagrams - State machines, lifecycle states
Git Graphs - Version control branching strategies
Gantt Charts - Project timelines, scheduling
Pie/Bar Charts - Data visualization
Quick Start Examples
Class Diagram (Domain Model)
classDiagram
Title -- Genre
Title *-- Season
Title *-- Review
User --> Review : creates
class Title {
+string name
+int releaseYear
+play()
}
class Genre {
+string name
+getTopTitles()
}
Sequence Diagram (API Flow)
sequenceDiagram
participant User
participant API
participant Database
User->>API: POST /login
API->>Database: Query credentials
Database-->>API: Return user data
alt Valid credentials
API-->>User: 200 OK + JWT token
else Invalid credentials
API-->>User: 401 Unauthorized
end
Flowchart (User Journey)
flowchart TD
Start([User visits site]) --> Auth{Authenticated?}
Auth -->|No| Login[Show login page]
Auth -->|Yes| Dashboard[Show dashboard]
Login --> Creds[Enter credentials]
Creds --> Validate{Valid?}
Validate -->|Yes| Dashboard
Validate -->|No| Error[Show error]
Error --> Login
ERD (Database Schema)
erDiagram
USER ||--o{ ORDER : places
ORDER ||--|{ LINE_ITEM : contains
PRODUCT ||--o{ LINE_ITEM : includes
USER {
int id PK
string email UK
string name
datetime created_at
}
ORDER {
int id PK
int user_id FK
decimal total
datetime created_at
}
Detailed References
For in-depth guidance on specific diagram types, see:
references/class-diagrams.md - Domain modeling, relationships (association, composition, aggregation, inheritance), multiplicity, methods/properties
references/sequence-diagrams.md - Actors, participants, messages (sync/async), activations, loops, alt/opt/par blocks, notes
references/flowcharts.md - Node shapes, connections, decision logic, subgraphs, styling
references/erd-diagrams.md - Entities, relationships, cardinality, keys, attributes
references/c4-diagrams.md - System context, container, component diagrams, boundaries
references/architecture-diagrams.md - Cloud services, infrastructure, CI/CD deployments
references/advanced-features.md - Themes, styling, configuration, layout options
Best Practices
Start Simple - Begin with core entities/components, add details incrementally
Use Meaningful Names - Clear labels make diagrams self-documenting
Comment Extensively - Use %% comments to explain complex relationships
Keep Focused - One diagram per concept; split large diagrams into multiple focused views
Version Control - Store .mmd files alongside code for easy updates
Add Context - Include titles and notes to explain diagram purpose
Iterate - Refine diagrams as understanding evolves
Configuration and Theming
Configure diagrams using frontmatter:
---
config:
theme: base
themeVariables:
primaryColor: "#ff6b6b"
---
flowchart LR
A --> B
Available themes: default, forest, dark, neutral, base
Layout options:
layout: dagre (default) - Classic balanced layout
layout: elk - Advanced layout for complex diagrams (requires integration)
Look options:
look: classic - Traditional Mermaid style
look: handDrawn - Sketch-like appearance
Exporting and Rendering
Native support in:
GitHub/GitLab - Automatically renders in Markdown
VS Code - With Markdown Mermaid extension
Notion, Obsidian, Confluence - Built-in support
Export options:
Mermaid Live Editor - Online editor with PNG/SVG export
Mermaid CLI - npm install -g @mermaid-js/mermaid-cli then mmdc -i input.mmd -o output.png
Docker - docker run --rm -v $(pwd):/data minlag/mermaid-cli -i /data/input.mmd -o /data/output.png
Common Pitfalls
Breaking characters - Avoid {} in comments, use proper escape sequences for special characters
Syntax errors - Misspellings break diagrams; validate syntax in Mermaid Live
Overcomplexity - Split complex diagrams into multiple focused views
Missing relationships - Document all important connections between entities
When to Create Diagrams
Always diagram when:
Starting new projects or features
Documenting complex systems
Explaining architecture decisions
Designing database schemas
Planning refactoring efforts
Onboarding new team members
Use diagrams to:
Align stakeholders on technical decisions
Document domain models collaboratively
Visualize data flows and system interactions
Plan before coding
Create living documentation that evolves with codedon't have the plugin yet? install it then click "run inline in claude" again.