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Create sequence diagrams with a domain-specific language.

Usage: quence [options] <FILE...>

Arguments:
  FILE                        file names to process, "-" for stdin

Options:
  -o, --output <type>         output type (choices: "js", "json", "pdf", "svg",
                              default: "pdf")
  -O, --out <FILE>            output file name, "-" for stdout. Not valid with
                              more than one input file.
  -p, --property <key=value>  diagram property in the form key=value.  May be
                              specified multiple times. (default: [])
  -v, --verbose               verbose logging
  -V, --version               output the version number
  -h, --help                  display help for command

Small example:

set text_color purple

Alice -> Bob: Hello #comment
Bob -> Alice: World
Bob -> Bob: !

Try it online

There is a client editor.

Installation

Use npm:

npm install -g quence

Syntax

The following sections describe syntax that can be placed in a .wsd file for input to the quence processor.

Comments

# [comment] Place a comment on a line by itself, or at the end of any line. If you need a # in a string, enclose the string in double quotes (").

Participants

participant "[description]" as [name] Create a new participant in the order that the participant directive appears in the input file. The description is output, and the name is what is used for reference in later directives.

Example:

participant Alice
participant "Bob Cat" as bob

Arrows

Arrows are draw between participants with open ends, closed ends, solid or dashed lines, and may be bi-directional.

ends

< or > closed arrow end

<< or >> open arrow end

You can also use the # indicator to show that a packet is lost. This will create an "X" arrowhead and only draw the line halfway across.

lines

- solid line

-- dashed line

Example:

# A "normal" message from A to B
A -> B

# An "exciting" message between A and B
# No, this doesn't have any defined meaning, as far as I know
A<-->>B

Messages

The minimum message looks like participant arrow participant, but a full description is:

[label:] participant[@time] arrow participant[@time] [:title] [[message properties]]

Draw a line with arrows between two participants. A participant that has not been previously mentioned will be automatically created. Note that a message may be of the form B -> B, which produces a self message.

Title

A message can have a title that will be drawn over the message line. The title will be justified toward the start of the message, or in the middle for bi-directional messages.

Example:

A->B: The title

Timestamps

Each message start time can have a timestamp associated with it by prefixing the message with label:. Subsequent messages can be declared to start or end at a given label by suffixing the participant name with @time, where time is the label from a previous message. This will usually result in a diagonal line.

Example:

early: A-->>B
late: B-->>A
A@early->B@late

Notes

You can put a note on an endpoint using note, as in:

note A: This is a note

Blocks

You can create a dotted block boundary around a section using the block, loop, and opt commands, as in:

block Do a thing
  A->B: Some messages
end

loop Many times
  A->B: Some messages
end

opt Might happen
  A->B: Some messages
end

The difference between these commands is that loop and opt also produce a shaded tab with the words "loop" and "opt" respectively, whereas block just labels the block but with no shaded tab.

Message properties

Message properties modify the message, and are of the form name [= value], with multiple properties separated by a comma (,). The following message properties may be set:

  • duration: The number of time slices that this message takes up. If this is not 1, a diagonal line will result. [Default: 1]
  • advance: The number of time slices to advance the clock after this message. This is useful after a flurry of crossing diagonal lines. [Default: 1]

Example:

A->B [duration=2, advance=2]
B->A [duration=2]

Diagram Properties

set [property] [value] set a property governing the production of the diagram to the given value. If the value is omitted, it defaults to true. Colors can be named colors or specified in hex, surrounded by quotes, like '#f0f8ff'.

You can also set an option with the -p a command line flag, as in:

-p property[=value]

Diagram Property Defaults

The following options may be set (followed by their defaults):

  • arrow_color: 'black'
  • arrow_height: 10
  • arrow_width: 15
  • auto_number: false
  • background: 'white'
  • block_tab_fill: 'gray'
  • block_stroke: 'gray'
  • column_width: 150
  • font: 'Helvetica'
  • line_color: 'black'
  • line_width: 1
  • rung_color: 'black'
  • rung_width: 1
  • text_color: 'black'
  • text_size: 13
  • time_height: 20

Programmatic Interface

import {draw} from 'quence'
import fs from 'fs'
const out = fs.createWriteStream('output.pdf')
draw("A->B", "pdf", out);

// Note that the draw function returns when processing completes, not when the
// stream is finished being written.  Wait on the stream's `finish` event
// if you need that.

Supported Output Types

  • PDF
  • SVG
  • JSON

Quence was formerly known as "arrow", until I was asked very nicely to let another project use that name.

Tests codecov

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Create sequence diagrams from textual descriptions.

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