Agent skill
mermaid-graph-writer
Writes precise, well-structured Mermaid diagrams for any visualization need. Use when creating flowcharts, sequence diagrams, state machines, ER models, timelines, mindmaps, Gantt charts, or any other Mermaid-supported diagram type. Activate on "mermaid", "diagram", "flowchart", "sequence diagram", "state diagram", "ER diagram", "visualize", "draw graph". NOT for rendering/exporting Mermaid to images (use mermaid-graph-renderer), ASCII art, or GUI-based design tools.
Install this agent skill to your Project
npx add-skill https://github.com/curiositech/some_claude_skills/tree/main/.claude/skills/mermaid-graph-writer
Metadata
Additional technical details for this skill
- tags
-
mermaid graph writer diagram flowchart
- category
- Content & Writing
- pairs with
-
[ { "skill": "mermaid-graph-renderer", "reason": "The writer creates the diagram syntax that the renderer converts to visual output" }, { "skill": "diagramming-expert", "reason": "ASCII/Unicode diagramming expertise informs Mermaid syntax structure and layout decisions" }, { "skill": "technical-writer", "reason": "Mermaid diagrams are embedded in technical documentation to explain system architecture" } ]
SKILL.md
Mermaid Graph Writer
Writes precise, well-structured Mermaid diagrams. Selects the optimal diagram type for the content, uses correct syntax, and produces diagrams that are readable by both humans (rendered) and agents (text DSL).
When to Use
✅ Use for:
- Creating any Mermaid diagram from a description or data
- Choosing the right diagram type for a visualization need
- Refactoring prose decision trees into Mermaid flowcharts
- Modeling system architectures, protocols, state machines, data models
- Encoding temporal knowledge as timeline diagrams
❌ NOT for:
- Rendering/exporting Mermaid to PNG/SVG/PDF (use
mermaid-graph-renderer) - ASCII art or Unicode box-drawing (use
diagramming-expert) - GUI-based design tools (Figma, etc.)
Diagram Type Selection
flowchart TD
A{What are you modeling?} -->|Branching logic| B[flowchart]
A -->|Request/response over time| C[sequenceDiagram]
A -->|States and transitions| D[stateDiagram-v2]
A -->|Entities and relationships| E[erDiagram]
A -->|Chronological evolution| F[timeline]
A -->|Concept hierarchy| G[mindmap]
A -->|Time-sequenced tasks| H[gantt]
A -->|Proportions| I[pie]
A -->|2-axis comparison| J[quadrantChart]
A -->|Branch/merge history| K[gitGraph]
A -->|Type hierarchy / OO| L[classDiagram]
A -->|User experience steps| M[journey]
A -->|Quantity flows| N[sankey-beta]
A -->|Numeric data| O[xychart-beta]
A -->|System components| P[block-beta]
A -->|Infrastructure| Q[architecture-beta]
A -->|Task board| R[kanban]
A -->|Requirements traceability| S[requirementDiagram]
A -->|System context / containers| T[C4Context]
A -->|Protocol packets / headers| U[packet-beta]
A -->|Multi-axis comparison| V[radar]
A -->|Hierarchical proportions| W[treemap]
A -->|Code-style sequences| X[zenuml]
Quick Reference
| Content | Type | Direction |
|---|---|---|
| Decision tree / process | flowchart TD |
Top-down for decisions, LR for processes |
| API protocol / agent comms | sequenceDiagram |
Always vertical (implicit) |
| Lifecycle / status machine | stateDiagram-v2 |
Automatic layout |
| Database / data model | erDiagram |
Automatic layout |
| "What changed when" | timeline |
Horizontal chronological |
| Taxonomy / brainstorm | mindmap |
Radial from root |
| Project schedule | gantt |
Horizontal timeline |
| Category proportions | pie |
Circular |
| Effort vs. impact | quadrantChart |
2D scatter |
| Git branching strategy | gitGraph |
Horizontal |
| Class/interface hierarchy | classDiagram |
Automatic |
| User flow with satisfaction | journey |
Horizontal sections |
| Flow quantities between categories | sankey-beta |
Left-to-right flow |
| Bar/line charts | xychart-beta |
Standard axes |
| System block layout | block-beta |
Grid-based |
| Cloud/infra topology | architecture-beta |
Grouped services |
| Task status columns | kanban |
Column-based |
| Requirements traceability | requirementDiagram |
Automatic layout |
| System context / containers | C4Context / C4Container |
Layered (5 sub-types) |
| Protocol packets / headers | packet-beta |
Horizontal bit layout |
| Multi-axis scoring | radar |
Radial axes |
| Hierarchical proportions | treemap |
Nested rectangles |
| Code-style sequences | zenuml |
Vertical (plugin) |
Flowchart Deep Dive (Most Common)
Direction
TD/TB— top-down (best for decision trees)LR— left-right (best for processes, pipelines)BT— bottom-up (rare, for dependency graphs)RL— right-left (rare)
Node Shapes
[text] Rectangle (default action)
(text) Rounded rectangle (soft step)
{text} Diamond (decision/condition)
([text]) Stadium/pill (start/end)
[[text]] Subroutine (subprocess)
[(text)] Cylinder (database/storage)
((text)) Circle (event/trigger)
>text] Flag (async/signal)
{{text}} Hexagon (preparation)
[/text/] Parallelogram (input/output)
[\text\] Reverse parallelogram
[/text\] Trapezoid
[\text/] Reverse trapezoid
Edge Styles
--> Solid arrow (main flow)
--- Solid line (association)
-.-> Dotted arrow (optional/async)
==> Thick arrow (emphasis/critical path)
--text--> Labeled edge
~~~ Invisible link (layout control only)
Subgraphs
flowchart TD
subgraph Backend
A[API] --> B[DB]
end
subgraph Frontend
C[UI] --> D[State]
end
C -->|fetch| A
Sequence Diagram Essentials
Messages
->> Solid arrow (sync request)
-->> Dotted arrow (async response)
-) Open arrow (async fire-and-forget)
-x Cross (failed/rejected)
Blocks
activate / deactivate Lifeline activation
alt / else / end Conditional branching
loop / end Repetition
par / and / end Parallel execution
critical / end Critical section
break / end Break-out flow
rect rgb(...) / end Background highlight
Numbering
Add autonumber after the first line to auto-number all messages.
State Diagram Essentials
[*] --> State1 Start transition
State1 --> State2 Named transition
State1 --> State2: event Labeled transition
State2 --> [*] End transition
state State1 { Nested states
[*] --> SubA
SubA --> SubB
}
state fork <<fork>> Fork pseudostate
state join <<join>> Join pseudostate
state choice <<choice>> Choice pseudostate
ER Diagram Essentials
Cardinality
||--|| Exactly one to exactly one
||--o{ One to zero-or-many
}o--o{ Zero-or-many to zero-or-many
||--|{ One to one-or-many
Attributes
erDiagram
USER {
int id PK
string name
string email UK
}
ORDER {
int id PK
int user_id FK
date created_at
}
USER ||--o{ ORDER : places
Writing Principles
1. Descriptive Labels, Not Codes
- ✅
A[Check if tests pass] - ❌
A[Step 2.3]
2. Consistent Direction
Pick one direction for the whole diagram. Don't mix TD and LR within the same flowchart.
3. Max 15 Nodes per Diagram
Beyond 15 nodes, split into multiple diagrams or use subgraphs. A crowded diagram is worse than no diagram.
4. Use Subgraphs for Grouping
When a diagram has natural clusters (frontend/backend, phases, teams), use subgraphs to group them visually.
5. Label All Decision Edges
Every edge leaving a diamond ({decision}) node must have a label:
- ✅
A{Ready?} -->|Yes| BandA -->|No| C - ❌
A{Ready?} --> BandA --> C(which is yes? which is no?)
6. Use Appropriate Edge Styles
- Solid arrows for main flow
- Dotted arrows for optional/async paths
- Thick arrows for critical paths or emphasis
- Invisible links (
~~~) only for layout tweaking
Anti-Patterns
Wrong Diagram Type
Novice: Using a flowchart for everything — even protocols, state machines, and data models. Expert: Match diagram type to content structure. Sequence diagrams for protocols. State diagrams for lifecycle. ER for data models. Each type exists because flowcharts can't express that structure well.
Overcrowded Diagram
Novice: One diagram with 30 nodes and crossing edges. Expert: Split into overview diagram + detail diagrams. Use subgraphs. Max ~15 nodes per diagram.
Unlabeled Decision Edges
Novice: {Decision} --> A and {Decision} --> B — which condition leads where?
Expert: Always label edges from decision diamonds: -->|Yes| and -->|No| (or -->|Success| and -->|Failure|, etc.)
Prose That Should Be a Diagram
Novice: "First check if X. If X then do A, otherwise do B. Then if A succeeds, do C, otherwise retry A." Expert: That's a flowchart. Write it as one. The formal graph is more precise AND more readable.
References
references/diagram-types.md— Consult for comprehensive syntax, features, and examples for all 23 Mermaid diagram types: timeline, mindmap, quadrant, sankey, XY chart, block, architecture, kanban, pie, gitgraph, class, journey, requirementDiagram, C4 (5 sub-types), packet-beta, radar, treemap, and zenumlscripts/validate_mermaid.py— Validates Mermaid syntax in any file: checks diagram type declarations, matching fences, structural correctness
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