#601

Global Rank · of 601 Skills

draw-io AI Agent Skill

View Source: cachemoney/agent-toolkit

Safe

Installation

npx skills add cachemoney/agent-toolkit --skill draw-io

6

Installs

draw.io Diagram Skill

1. Basic Rules

  • Edit only .drawio files
  • Do not directly edit .drawio.png files
  • Use auto-generated .drawio.png by pre-commit hook in slides

2. Font Settings

For diagrams used in Quarto slides,
specify defaultFontFamily in mxGraphModel tag:

<mxGraphModel defaultFontFamily="Noto Sans JP" ...>

Also explicitly specify fontFamily in each text element's style attribute:

style="text;html=1;fontSize=27;fontFamily=Noto Sans JP;"

3. Conversion Commands

See conversion script at scripts/convert-drawio-to-png.sh.

# Convert all .drawio files
mise exec -- pre-commit run --all-files

# Convert specific .drawio file
mise exec -- pre-commit run convert-drawio-to-png --files assets/my-diagram.drawio

# Run script directly (using skill's script)
bash ~/.claude/skills/draw-io/scripts/convert-drawio-to-png.sh assets/diagram1.drawio

Internal command used:

drawio -x -f png -s 2 -t -o output.drawio.png input.drawio
Option Description
-x Export mode
-f png PNG format output
-s 2 2x scale (high resolution)
-t Transparent background
-o Output file path

4. Layout Adjustment

4.1. Coordinate Adjustment Steps

  1. Open .drawio file in text editor (plain XML format)
  2. Find mxCell for element to adjust (search by value attribute for text)
  3. Adjust coordinates in mxGeometry tag
    • x: Position from left
    • y: Position from top
    • width: Width
    • height: Height
  4. Run conversion and verify

4.2. Coordinate Calculation

  • Element center coordinate = y + (height / 2)
  • To align multiple elements, calculate and match center coordinates

5. Design Principles

5.1. Basic Principles

  • Clarity: Create simple, visually clean diagrams
  • Consistency: Unify colors, fonts, icon sizes, line thickness
  • Accuracy: Do not sacrifice accuracy for simplification

5.2. Element Rules

  • Label all elements
  • Use arrows to indicate direction
    (prefer 2 unidirectional arrows over bidirectional)
  • Use latest official icons
  • Add legend to explain custom symbols

5.3. Accessibility

  • Ensure sufficient color contrast
  • Use patterns in addition to colors

5.4. Progressive Disclosure

Separate complex systems into staged diagrams:

Diagram Type Purpose
Context Diagram System overview from external perspective
System Diagram Main components and relationships
Component Diagram Technical details and integration points
Deployment Diagram Infrastructure configuration
Data Flow Diagram Data flow and transformation
Sequence Diagram Time-series interactions

5.5. Metadata

Include title, description, last updated, author, and version in diagrams.

6. Best Practices

6.1. Background Color

  • Remove background="#ffffff"
  • Transparent background adapts to various themes

6.2. Font Size

  • Use 1.5x standard font size (around 18px) for PDF readability

6.3. Japanese Text Width

  • Allow 30-40px per character
  • Insufficient width causes unintended line breaks
<!-- For 10-character text, allow 300-400px -->
<mxGeometry x="140" y="60" width="400" height="40" />

6.4. Arrow Placement

  • Always place arrows at back (position in XML right after Title)
  • Position arrows to avoid overlapping with labels
  • Keep arrow start/end at least 20px from label bottom edge
<!-- Title -->
<mxCell id="title" value="..." .../>

<!-- Arrows (back layer) -->
<mxCell id="arrow1" style="edgeStyle=..." .../>

<!-- Other elements (front layer) -->
<mxCell id="box1" .../>

6.5. Arrow Connection to Text Labels

For text elements, exitX/exitY don't work, so use explicit coordinates:

<!-- Good: Explicit coordinates with sourcePoint/targetPoint -->
<mxCell id="arrow" style="..." edge="1" parent="1">
  <mxGeometry relative="1" as="geometry">
    <mxPoint x="1279" y="500" as="sourcePoint"/>
    <mxPoint x="119" y="500" as="targetPoint"/>
    <Array as="points">
      <mxPoint x="1279" y="560"/>
      <mxPoint x="119" y="560"/>
    </Array>
  </mxGeometry>
</mxCell>

6.6. edgeLabel Offset Adjustment

Adjust offset attribute to distance arrow labels from arrows:

<!-- Place above arrow (negative value to distance) -->
<mxPoint x="0" y="-40" as="offset"/>

<!-- Place below arrow (positive value to distance) -->
<mxPoint x="0" y="40" as="offset"/>

6.7. Remove Unnecessary Elements

  • Remove decorative icons irrelevant to context
  • Example: If ECR exists, separate Docker icon is unnecessary

6.8. Labels and Headings

  • Service name only: 1 line
  • Service name + supplementary info: 2 lines with line break
  • Redundant notation (e.g., ECR Container Registry): shorten to 1 line
  • Use &lt;br&gt; tag for line breaks

6.9. Background Frame and Internal Element Placement

When placing elements inside background frames (grouping boxes),
ensure sufficient margin.

  • YOU MUST: Internal elements must have at least 30px margin from frame boundary
  • YOU MUST: Account for rounded corners (rounded=1) and stroke width
  • YOU MUST: Always visually verify PNG output for overflow

Coordinate calculation verification:

Background frame: y=20, height=400 -> range is y=20-420
Internal element top: frame y + 30 or more (e.g., y=50)
Internal element bottom: frame y + height - 30 or less (e.g., up to y=390)

Bad example (may overflow):

<!-- Background frame -->
<mxCell id="bg" style="rounded=1;strokeWidth=3;...">
  <mxGeometry x="500" y="20" width="560" height="400" />
</mxCell>
<!-- Text: y=30 is too close to frame top (y=20) -->
<mxCell id="label" value="Title" style="text;...">
  <mxGeometry x="510" y="30" width="540" height="35" />
</mxCell>

Good example (sufficient margin):

<!-- Background frame -->
<mxCell id="bg" style="rounded=1;strokeWidth=3;...">
  <mxGeometry x="500" y="20" width="560" height="430" />
</mxCell>
<!-- Text: y=50 is 30px from frame top (y=20) -->
<mxCell id="label" value="Title" style="text;...">
  <mxGeometry x="510" y="50" width="540" height="35" />
</mxCell>

7. Reference

AWS icon search examples:

python ~/.claude/skills/draw-io/scripts/find_aws_icon.py ec2
python ~/.claude/skills/draw-io/scripts/find_aws_icon.py lambda

8. Checklist

  • No background color set (page="0")
  • Font size appropriate (larger recommended)
  • Arrows placed at back layer
  • Arrows not overlapping labels (verify in PNG)
  • Arrow start/end sufficiently distant from labels (at least 20px)
  • Arrows not penetrating boxes or icons (verify in PNG)
  • Internal elements not overflowing background frame (verify in PNG)
  • 30px+ margin between background frame and internal elements
  • AWS service names are official names/correct abbreviations
  • AWS icons are latest version (mxgraph.aws4.*)
  • No unnecessary elements remaining
  • Visually verified PNG conversion

9. Image Display in reveal.js Slides

Add auto-stretch: false to YAML header:

---
title: "Your Presentation"
format:
  revealjs:
    auto-stretch: false
---

This ensures correct image display on mobile devices.

Installs

Installs 6
Global Rank #601 of 601

Security Audit

ath Safe
socket Safe
Alerts: 0 Score: 90
snyk Low

How to use this skill

1

Install draw-io by running npx skills add cachemoney/agent-toolkit --skill draw-io in your project directory. Run the install command above in your project directory. The skill file will be downloaded from GitHub and placed in your project.

2

No configuration needed. Your AI agent (Claude Code, Cursor, Windsurf, etc.) automatically detects installed skills and uses them as context when generating code.

3

The skill enhances your agent's understanding of draw-io, helping it follow established patterns, avoid common mistakes, and produce production-ready output.

What you get

Skills are plain-text instruction files — not executable code. They encode expert knowledge about frameworks, languages, or tools that your AI agent reads to improve its output. This means zero runtime overhead, no dependency conflicts, and full transparency: you can read and review every instruction before installing.

Compatibility

This skill works with any AI coding agent that supports the skills.sh format, including Claude Code (Anthropic), Cursor, Windsurf, Cline, Aider, and other tools that read project-level context files. Skills are framework-agnostic at the transport level — the content inside determines which language or framework it applies to.

Data sourced from the skills.sh registry and GitHub. Install counts and security audits are updated regularly.

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