depict
plantuml
depict | plantuml | |
---|---|---|
2 | 123 | |
26 | 9,641 | |
- | 2.0% | |
6.6 | 9.4 | |
12 months ago | 7 days ago | |
Rust | Java | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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depict
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A CSS-Inspired Syntax for Flowcharts
One potential solution direction, which you can try out via my own incomplete drawing toy [1] is to treat punctuation characters like SP (“ “), COMMA (“,”), and SEMICOLON (“;”) as markers for the product operations of a family of monoids that allow you to specify more and more complicated sequences without requiring the typist to “move the cursor left” to add a matching character.
This way, simple lists can be specified via juxtaposition:
a b c
And then more complex lists
thing 1, thing 2, thing 3
and still more complex lists like
A complex thing; with data, and more data
can be specified in a way that is potentially still human-legible and easily editable.
Combined with ~instant feedback while typing and, ideally, a “brushing” system to allow selection of parts of the textual model via the linked drawing, I am hopeful that this can be solved resiliently, at least for the most common use cases.
(Part of why I am excited about OP’s work here though is that while I have done a fair bit in my own project on drawing a related kind of diagrams, I have myself only begun thinking about how to make the resulting drawings nicely stylable/themeable.)
[1] https://mstone.info/depict/ -> https://github.com/mstone/depict
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Ask HN: Visualizing software designs, especially of large systems (if at all)?
You might find it helpful to distinguish between visualizing the design of the system being implemented by your software, visualizing protocols being implemented by your software, visualizing the design of the your software itself, and visualizing important implementation details at runtime, e.g. for debugging, profiling, and operations.
For visualizing system designs, you should take a look at STAMP, e.g., via “Engineering A Safer World” + the resources at mit.edu/psas + on YouTube.
(Multiple tools, both commercial and libre, exist and are being developed to make these diagrams, although for what it’s worth, I mostly hear about people making them using draw.io, Google Drawings, on physical paper/whiteboards, or occasionally with specialized tooling.
I have also recently published a project in this area, https://github.com/mstone/depict, which I believe is well on its way toward addressing some unmet needs here.)
For visualizing protocols, things like sequence diagrams, data flow diagrams, DRAKON flow charts, value stream maps, and occasional more specialized objects like CPSA “cryptographic protocol shapes” / strand space skeletons are where I start depending on the flavor of what’s needed.
For visualizing the design of implementations themselves, I have not yet seen anything that I feel obliged to recommend; rather, here, I suggest investing in adding illustrations to your existing documentation in whatever way is easiest for you to use to clarify whatever subtleties you need to clarify for your audience.
(Here I tend to look at things like ASCII-art, SQLite’s railroad diagrams (now made with pikchr, AIUI), and sequence diagrams, as mentioned by other commenters, as helpful examples to start with.)
Finally, for implementing debugging/profiling/operational illustrations, there is a such a rich set of examples to turn to — whether from the very specialized (custom process model video rendering pipelines in robotics) to TensorBoard for TensorFlow to general-purpose tools like browser performance debugging suites, flame charts, or Go’s built-in profile graphing tools - that rather than learn any particular such tools, I’d instead suggest trying to get comfortable with the building blocks underlying these systems, which include contemporary GUI/web apps, custom drawing and animation tools like SVG, pretty printers, and Grammar-of-Graphics systems like vega-lite.
(Note: although it may seem superficially extraneous to your question, the reason I also suggest thinking about debugging visualizations in this context is because IMO, to work, they ~necessarily encode a visual model of the design of your implementation since it is the design of the implementation that provides the vocabulary and relationships that have to be understood and navigated in order to successfully debug/optimize/monitor any given running instance of whatever system you are building.)
plantuml
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PlantUMLApp 3.0 - Let's play with AI Multi-Modality
New version 3.0 of my PlantUML App for iPad is out with exciting update! 🤩 The new multi-modality feature now lets you transform hand-drawn diagrams into PlantUML scripts with just a pencil ✍🏻 or your fingers 👆. Take a look 👀 to this short on YouTube and download it from App Store to support me 👍🏻.
- FLaNK Stack 26 February 2024
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What is your favorite tool for designing complex architecture, and why is it MS Paint?
Someone at work showed me https://plantuml.com/ recently. If you want your diagrams as code . Version controlled etc.. I highly recommend it.
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What's a piece of technology that you have work with at your job that you hate?
Maybe try PlantUML.
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Discovering the Power of PlantUML: Visualizing YAML, JSON, and More!
Open-source tool that uses simple textual descriptions to draw beautiful UML diagrams.
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Pikchr: A PIC-like markup language for diagrams in technical documentation
Seems like a considerable upgrade from PlanUML (https://plantuml.com/ - which is amazing, but sometimes you just can't seem to be able to align the stuff the way you want too).
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Entity Relationship Diagrams
plantuml is amongst the best there is. kroki.io has a sandbox for it mermaid.js can do it in notion, it works as well as any other mermaid. dbvisualizer is fantastic if you have an existing schema in a db instance. you may need the trial license to render the diagrams
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Pravljenje AWS strukturnog diagrama
PlantUML ima podsku za mnogo vise dijagrama - https://plantuml.com/ (bar za sada).
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How do I create UML diagram?
I mean, I know about PlantUML where you can write code that will generate cool diagrams and it's feels like one of solutions\implementations but not the right one. What actual way people in huge companies create UML diagrams for their projects? I can't find any software or language syntax, even guides on Youtube about UML is just hours of talking about all sorts of UML diagrams without ever mentioning any software or syntax or actual way to create them.
- How can i make a sequence diagram in react?(example image)
What are some alternatives?
spekt8 - Visualize your Kubernetes cluster in real time
Mermaid - Edit, preview and share mermaid charts/diagrams. New implementation of the live editor.
ScrivanoForLinux - Scrivano is a notetaking application for handwritten notes.
mermaid - Generation of diagrams like flowcharts or sequence diagrams from text in a similar manner as markdown
shotglass - Tools to visualize large code bases in different ways.
draw.io - draw.io is a JavaScript, client-side editor for general diagramming.
Pythonocc-nodes-for-Ryven - Pythonocc nodes for Ryven
kroki - Creates diagrams from textual descriptions!
TypeScript-Call-Graph - CLI to generate an interactive graph of functions and calls from your TypeScript files
wavedrom - :ocean: Digital timing diagram rendering engine
plurid - Explore Information as a 3D Structure
graphviz