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A Python library that makes creating PlantUML diagrams intuitive via type hints

Project description

plantuml-compose

A Python library that makes creating PlantUML diagrams intuitive and type-safe.

Why plantuml-compose?

PlantUML is powerful but its text syntax can be cryptic. What does A -[#red,dashed]-> B mean? What options are available for a state transition?

plantuml-compose solves this by providing:

  • Discoverable APIs: Use your IDE's autocomplete to explore options
  • Type safety: Catch errors before rendering, not after
  • Pure factory functions: Compose diagrams declaratively with nesting
  • Full PlantUML coverage: Every diagram type, every feature

Quick Start

from plantuml_compose import sequence_diagram, render

d = sequence_diagram(title="API Call")
p = d.participants
e = d.events

client = p.actor("Client")
server = p.participant("Server")
d.add(client, server)

d.phase("Request", [
    e.message(client, server, "GET /users"),
    e.reply(server, client, "200 OK"),
])

print(render(d))

The Pattern

Every diagram follows the same shape:

# 1. Create diagram — get namespace(s)
d = state_diagram(title="Lifecycle")
el = d.elements
t = d.transitions

# 2. Create elements via namespace factories
idle = el.state("Idle")
active = el.state("Active")

# 3. Register elements
d.add(idle, active)

# 4. Create and register connections
d.connect(
    t.transitions(
        (el.initial(), idle, "start"),
        (idle, active, "go"),
        (active, el.final(), "done"),
    )
)

# 5. Render
print(render(d))

Namespaces organize the API — type d.elements. or d.transitions. and your IDE shows every available factory method.

Bulk helpers reduce repetition:

# Instead of individual calls:
t.transition(a, b, label="x"),
t.transition(b, c, label="y"),
t.transition(c, d, label="z"),

# Use the plural form:
t.transitions(
    (a, b, "x"),
    (b, c, "y"),
    (c, d, "z"),
)

# Or fan-out from one source:
r.arrows_from(api,
    (db, "queries"),
    (cache, "reads"),
    (queue, "publishes"),
)

Styling

Two levels of styling are available on every diagram type.

Inline styles on individual elements and connections:

# Element styling
el.state("Error", style={"background": "#FFCDD2", "line_color": "red"})

# Connection styling — string shorthand or dict
t.transition(a, b, style="dashed")
t.transition(a, b, style={"color": "red", "pattern": "dotted"})

# Arrow length (layout hint)
r.arrow(a, b, length=1)   # short: ->
r.arrow(a, b, length=3)   # long:  --->

# Custom arrow heads
r.arrow(a, b, left_head="o", right_head=">>")  # o-->>

Diagram-wide styling via diagram_style=:

d = class_diagram(
    title="Model",
    diagram_style={
        "class_": {"background": "#E3F2FD", "round_corner": 10},
        "arrow": {"line_color": "gray", "font_size": 10},
        "note": {"background": "#FFF9C4"},
        "stereotypes": {
            "important": {"background": "pink", "font_style": "bold"},
        },
    },
)

Every element property is documented in ElementStyleDict — hover over it in your IDE to see all available keys (background, line_color, font_color, font_name, font_size, padding, margin, round_corner, shadowing, max_width, and more).

Supported Diagram Types

Behavioral

Type Use When Guide
Sequence Message flows between participants API calls, protocols
State Entity lifecycle tracking Order status, workflows
Activity Process flow with decisions and parallelism Business processes, algorithms
Use Case System boundaries and actor goals Requirements, features
Timing State changes over time Hardware signals, protocol timing

Structural

Type Use When Guide
Class Types, attributes, and relationships Domain models, API types
Object Specific instances and values Test scenarios, snapshots
Component System architecture Services, modules, dependencies
Deployment Software on infrastructure Servers, containers, cloud
Network Network topology IP addressing, segments

Hierarchical

Type Use When Guide
Mind Map Brainstorming and organizing ideas Feature planning, concepts
WBS Breaking down work Project planning, tasks
Gantt Scheduling with dependencies Timelines, sprint planning

Data & UI

Type Use When Guide
JSON Visualizing JSON data API responses, config
YAML Visualizing YAML data Config files, specs
Salt UI wireframes Forms, layouts, menus

Composition

Feature Guide
Sub-diagrams Embed diagrams inside notes and messages

Server URLs

from plantuml_compose import render, render_url

render_url(render(d))                            # https://www.plantuml.com/plantuml/svg/...
render_url(render(d), format="png")              # PNG format
render_url(render(d), server="http://my-server") # custom server

CLI: Markdown Processing

puml-md (also available as plantuml-compose md) processes markdown files, executing Python code blocks that import plantuml_compose and inserting rendered diagram images.

Given a markdown file containing:

```python
from plantuml_compose import state_diagram, render

d = state_diagram(title="Example")
d.add(d.elements.state("Active"))
print(render(d))
```

Running puml-md doc.md produces the same file with a diagram image appended after the code block:

```python
from plantuml_compose import state_diagram, render

d = state_diagram(title="Example")
d.add(d.elements.state("Active"))
print(render(d))
```

![Diagram](https://www.plantuml.com/plantuml/svg/...)

Re-running replaces existing diagram URLs rather than duplicating them.

puml-md doc.md            # file → stdout
puml-md -i doc.md         # in-place update
puml-md -id doc.md        # in-place + wrap code in <details>
puml-md --validate doc.md # check diagrams against the server
cat doc.md | puml-md      # stdin → stdout
Flag Description
-i, --in-place Modify file in place
-d, --details Wrap code blocks in collapsible <details><summary>
--validate Check generated diagrams against the PlantUML server; exits non-zero on errors
--server URL Custom PlantUML server (default: public server)
--format FMT Output format: svg, png, txt (default: svg)

Installation

pip install plantuml-compose

Requires Python 3.13+.

Development

# Install dependencies
uv sync

# Run tests
uv run pytest

# Validate output against PlantUML
plantuml --check-syntax output.puml

License

MIT

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