AgentSkillsCN

mermaid-diagrams

使用 Mermaid 语法绘制软件架构图。当用户需要通过图表来创建、可视化或记录软件,例如类图、序列图、流程图、ER 图、C4 架构图、状态图、Git 图,以及其他各类图表时,此技能将助您事半功倍。当您收到“绘制图表”“可视化”“建模”“梳理架构”“展现系统流程”等需求时,此技能将为您提供有力支持。

SKILL.md
--- frontmatter
name: mermaid-diagrams
model: fast
version: 1.0.0
description: >
  Create software diagrams using Mermaid syntax. Use when users need to create, visualize,
  or document software through diagrams including class diagrams, sequence diagrams, flowcharts,
  ERDs, C4 architecture diagrams, state diagrams, git graphs, and other diagram types. Triggers
  include requests to diagram, visualize, model, map out, or show the flow of a system.
tags: [diagrams, mermaid, visualization, architecture, documentation, modeling]

Mermaid Diagrams

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.

Installation

OpenClaw / Moltbot / Clawbot

bash
npx clawhub@latest install mermaid-diagrams

Core Syntax

All Mermaid diagrams follow this pattern:

mermaid
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; invalid parameters fail silently

Diagram Type Selection

TypeUse ForReference
Class DiagramsDomain modeling, OOP design, entity relationshipsreferences/class-diagrams.md
Sequence DiagramsAPI flows, auth flows, component interactionsreferences/sequence-diagrams.md
FlowchartsProcesses, algorithms, decision trees, user journeysreferences/flowcharts.md
ERDDatabase schemas, table relationships, data modelingreferences/erd-diagrams.md
C4 DiagramsSystem context, containers, components, architecturereferences/c4-diagrams.md
State DiagramsState machines, lifecycle states
Git GraphsBranching strategies
Gantt ChartsProject timelines, scheduling

For styling, themes, and layout options: See references/advanced-features.md

Quick Start Examples

Class Diagram (Domain Model)

mermaid
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)

mermaid
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)

mermaid
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)

mermaid
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
    }

Best Practices

  1. Start simple — begin with core entities/components, add details incrementally
  2. Use meaningful names — clear labels make diagrams self-documenting
  3. Comment extensively — use %% comments to explain complex relationships
  4. Keep focused — one diagram per concept; split large diagrams into multiple views
  5. Version control — store .mmd files alongside code for easy updates
  6. Add context — include titles and notes to explain diagram purpose
  7. Iterate — refine diagrams as understanding evolves

Configuration and Theming

Configure diagrams using frontmatter:

mermaid
---
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

Look options:

  • look: classic — traditional Mermaid style
  • look: handDrawn — sketch-like appearance

Rendering and Export

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

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

Common Pitfalls

  • Breaking characters — avoid {} in comments; escape special characters
  • Syntax errors — misspellings break diagrams; validate in Mermaid Live
  • Overcomplexity — split complex diagrams into multiple focused views
  • Missing relationships — document all important connections between entities
  • Stale diagrams — a wrong diagram is worse than no diagram; update when systems change

NEVER Do

  1. NEVER create diagrams with more than 15 nodes — they become unreadable; split into multiple focused diagrams
  2. NEVER leave arrows unlabeled — every connection should explain the relationship or data flow
  3. NEVER create diagrams without a title or caption — context-free diagrams are useless outside the author's head
  4. NEVER use diagrams as the sole documentation — pair diagrams with prose that explains the "why"
  5. NEVER let diagrams go stale — update diagrams when architecture changes; stale diagrams mislead
  6. NEVER use Mermaid for data visualization — Mermaid is for architecture and flow diagrams, not charts of business data