mermaid-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
.mmdfiles 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 layoutlayout: elk- Advanced layout for complex diagrams (requires integration)
Look options:
look: classic- Traditional Mermaid stylelook: 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-clithenmmdc -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 code
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