Sequence diagrams

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A Sequence diagram is an interaction diagram that shows how processes operate with one another and in what order.

Mermaid can render sequence diagrams.

sequenceDiagram
    Alice->>John: Hello John, how are you?
    John-->>Alice: Great!
    Alice-)John: See you later!
A note on nodes, the word "end" could potentially break the diagram, due to the way that the mermaid language is scripted.

If unavoidable, one must use parentheses(), quotation marks "", or brackets {},[], to enclose the word "end". i.e : (end), [end], {end}.

Syntax

Participants

The participants can be defined implicitly as in the first example on this page. The participants or actors are rendered in order of appearance in the diagram source text. Sometimes you might want to show the participants in a different order than how they appear in the first message. It is possible to specify the actor’s order of appearance by doing the following:

sequenceDiagram
    participant Alice
    participant Bob
    Alice->>Bob: Hi Bob
    Bob->>Alice: Hi Alice

Actors

If you specifically want to use the actor symbol instead of a rectangle with text you can do so by using actor statements as per below.

sequenceDiagram
    actor Alice
    actor Bob
    Alice->>Bob: Hi Bob
    Bob->>Alice: Hi Alice
sequenceDiagram
    actor Alice
    actor Bob
    Alice->>Bob: Hi Bob
    Bob->>Alice: Hi Alice

Aliases

The actor can have a convenient identifier and a descriptive label.

sequenceDiagram
    participant A as Alice
    participant J as John
    A->>J: Hello John, how are you?
    J->>A: Great!

Messages

Messages can be of two displayed either solid or with a dotted line.

[Actor][Arrow][Actor]:Message text

There are six types of arrows currently supported:

Type

Description

->

Solid line without arrow

–>

Dotted line without arrow

->>

Solid line with arrowhead

–>>

Dotted line with arrowhead

-x

Solid line with a cross at the end

–x

Dotted line with a cross at the end.

-)

Solid line with an open arrow at the end (async)

–)

Dotted line with a open arrow at the end (async)

Activations

It is possible to activate and deactivate an actor. (de)activation can be dedicated declarations:

sequenceDiagram
    Alice->>John: Hello John, how are you?
    activate John
    John-->>Alice: Great!
    deactivate John

There is also a shortcut notation by appending +/- suffix to the message arrow:

sequenceDiagram
    Alice->>+John: Hello John, how are you?
    John-->>-Alice: Great!

Activations can be stacked for same actor:

sequenceDiagram
    Alice->>+John: Hello John, how are you?
    Alice->>+John: John, can you hear me?
    John-->>-Alice: Hi Alice, I can hear you!
    John-->>-Alice: I feel great!

Notes

It is possible to add notes to a sequence diagram. This is done by the notation Note [ right of | left of | over ] [Actor]: Text in note content

See the example below:

sequenceDiagram
    participant John
    Note right of John: Text in note

It is also possible to create notes spanning two participants:

sequenceDiagram
    Alice->John: Hello John, how are you?
    Note over Alice,John: A typical interaction

Loops

It is possible to express loops in a sequence diagram. This is done by the notation

loop Loop text
... statements ...
end

See the example below:

sequenceDiagram
    Alice->John: Hello John, how are you?
    loop Every minute
        John-->Alice: Great!
    end

Alt

It is possible to express alternative paths in a sequence diagram. This is done by the notation

alt Describing text
... statements ...
else
... statements ...
end

or if there is sequence that is optional (if without else).

opt Describing text
... statements ...
end

See the example below:

sequenceDiagram
    Alice->>Bob: Hello Bob, how are you?
    alt is sick
        Bob->>Alice: Not so good :(
    else is well
        Bob->>Alice: Feeling fresh like a daisy
    end
    opt Extra response
        Bob->>Alice: Thanks for asking
    end

Parallel

It is possible to show actions that are happening in parallel.

This is done by the notation

par [Action 1]
... statements ...
and [Action 2]
... statements ...
and [Action N]
... statements ...
end

See the example below:

sequenceDiagram
    par Alice to Bob
        Alice->>Bob: Hello guys!
    and Alice to John
        Alice->>John: Hello guys!
    end
    Bob-->>Alice: Hi Alice!
    John-->>Alice: Hi Alice!

It is also possible to nest parallel blocks.

sequenceDiagram
    par Alice to Bob
        Alice->>Bob: Go help John
    and Alice to John
        Alice->>John: I want this done today
        par John to Charlie
            John->>Charlie: Can we do this today?
        and John to Diana
            John->>Diana: Can you help us today?
        end
    end

Background Highlighting

It is possible to highlight flows by providing colored background rects. This is done by the notation

The colors are defined using rgb and rgba syntax.

rect rgb(0, 255, 0)
... content ...
end
rect rgba(0, 0, 255, .1)
... content ...
end

See the examples below:

sequenceDiagram
    participant Alice
    participant John

    rect rgb(191, 223, 255)
    note right of Alice: Alice calls John.
    Alice->>+John: Hello John, how are you?
    rect rgb(200, 150, 255)
    Alice->>+John: John, can you hear me?
    John-->>-Alice: Hi Alice, I can hear you!
    end
    John-->>-Alice: I feel great!
    end
    Alice ->>+ John: Did you want to go to the game tonight?
    John -->>- Alice: Yeah! See you there.

Comments

Comments can be entered within a sequence diagram, which will be ignored by the parser. Comments need to be on their own line, and must be prefaced with %% (double percent signs). Any text after the start of the comment to the next newline will be treated as a comment, including any diagram syntax

sequenceDiagram
    Alice->>John: Hello John, how are you?
    %% this is a comment
    John-->>Alice: Great!

Entity codes to escape characters

It is possible to escape characters using the syntax exemplified here.

sequenceDiagram
    A->>B: I #9829; you!
    B->>A: I #9829; you #infin; times more!

Numbers given are base 10, so # can be encoded as #35;. It is also supported to use HTML character names.

Because semicolons can be used instead of line breaks to define the markup, you need to use #59; to include a semicolon in message text.

sequenceNumbers

It is possible to get a sequence number attached to each arrow in a sequence diagram. This can be configured when adding mermaid to the website as shown below:

    <script>
      mermaid.initialize({
        sequence: { showSequenceNumbers: true },
      });
    </script>

It can also be be turned on via the diagram code as in the diagram:

sequenceDiagram
    autonumber
    Alice->>John: Hello John, how are you?
    loop Healthcheck
        John->>John: Fight against hypochondria
    end
    Note right of John: Rational thoughts!
    John-->>Alice: Great!
    John->>Bob: How about you?
    Bob-->>John: Jolly good!

Actor Menus

Actors can have popup-menus containing individualized links to external pages. For example, if an actor represented a web service, useful links might include a link to the service health dashboard, repo containing the code for the service, or a wiki page describing the service.

This can be configured by adding one or more link lines with the format:

link <actor>: <link-label> @ <link-url>
sequenceDiagram
    participant Alice
    participant John
    link Alice: Dashboard @ https://dashboard.contoso.com/alice
    link Alice: Wiki @ https://wiki.contoso.com/alice
    link John: Dashboard @ https://dashboard.contoso.com/john
    link John: Wiki @ https://wiki.contoso.com/john
    Alice->>John: Hello John, how are you?
    John-->>Alice: Great!
    Alice-)John: See you later!

Advanced Menu Syntax

There is an advanced syntax that relies on JSON formatting. If you are comfortable with JSON format, then this exists as well.

This can be configured by adding the links lines with the format:

links <actor>: <json-formatted link-name link-url pairs>

An example is below:

sequenceDiagram
    participant Alice
    participant John
    links Alice: {"Dashboard": "https://dashboard.contoso.com/alice", "Wiki": "https://wiki.contoso.com/alice"}
    links John: {"Dashboard": "https://dashboard.contoso.com/john", "Wiki": "https://wiki.contoso.com/john"}
    Alice->>John: Hello John, how are you?
    John-->>Alice: Great!
    Alice-)John: See you later!

Styling

Styling of a sequence diagram is done by defining a number of css classes. During rendering these classes are extracted from the file located at src/themes/sequence.scss

Classes used

Class

Description

actor

Style for the actor box at the top of the diagram.

text.actor

Styles for text in the actor box at the top of the diagram.

actor-line

The vertical line for an actor.

messageLine0

Styles for the solid message line.

messageLine1

Styles for the dotted message line.

messageText

Defines styles for the text on the message arrows.

labelBox

Defines styles label to left in a loop.

labelText

Styles for the text in label for loops.

loopText

Styles for the text in the loop box.

loopLine

Defines styles for the lines in the loop box.

note

Styles for the note box.

noteText

Styles for the text on in the note boxes.

Sample stylesheet

body {
    background: white;
}

.actor {
    stroke: #ccccff;
    fill: #ececff;
}
text.actor {
    fill: black;
    stroke: none;
    font-family: Helvetica;
}

.actor-line {
    stroke: grey;
}

.messageLine0 {
    stroke-width: 1.5;
    stroke-dasharray: '2 2';
    marker-end: 'url(#arrowhead)';
    stroke: black;
}

.messageLine1 {
    stroke-width: 1.5;
    stroke-dasharray: '2 2';
    stroke: black;
}

#arrowhead {
    fill: black;
}

.messageText {
    fill: black;
    stroke: none;
    font-family: 'trebuchet ms', verdana, arial;
    font-size: 14px;
}

.labelBox {
    stroke: #ccccff;
    fill: #ececff;
}

.labelText {
    fill: black;
    stroke: none;
    font-family: 'trebuchet ms', verdana, arial;
}

.loopText {
    fill: black;
    stroke: none;
    font-family: 'trebuchet ms', verdana, arial;
}

.loopLine {
    stroke-width: 2;
    stroke-dasharray: '2 2';
    marker-end: 'url(#arrowhead)';
    stroke: #ccccff;
}

.note {
    stroke: #decc93;
    fill: #fff5ad;
}

.noteText {
    fill: black;
    stroke: none;
    font-family: 'trebuchet ms', verdana, arial;
    font-size: 14px;
}

Configuration

Is it possible to adjust the margins for rendering the sequence diagram.

This is done by defining mermaid.sequenceConfig or by the CLI to use a json file with the configuration. How to use the CLI is described in the mermaidCLI page. mermaid.sequenceConfig can be set to a JSON string with config parameters or the corresponding object.

mermaid.sequenceConfig = {
    diagramMarginX: 50,
    diagramMarginY: 10,
    boxTextMargin: 5,
    noteMargin: 10,
    messageMargin: 35,
    mirrorActors: true
};

Possible configuration parameters:

Parameter

Description

Default value

mirrorActors

Turns on/off the rendering of actors below the diagram as well as above it

false

bottomMarginAdj

Adjusts how far down the graph ended. Wide borders styles with css could generate unwanted clipping which is why this config param exists.

1

actorFontSize

Sets the font size for the actor’s description

14

actorFontFamily

Sets the font family for the actor’s description

“Open-Sans”, “sans-serif”

actorFontWeight

Sets the font weight for the actor’s description

“Open-Sans”, “sans-serif”

noteFontSize

Sets the font size for actor-attached notes

14

noteFontFamily

Sets the font family for actor-attached notes

“trebuchet ms”, verdana, arial

noteFontWeight

Sets the font weight for actor-attached notes

“trebuchet ms”, verdana, arial

noteAlign

Sets the text alignment for text in actor-attached notes

center

messageFontSize

Sets the font size for actor<->actor messages

16

messageFontFamily

Sets the font family for actor<->actor messages

“trebuchet ms”, verdana, arial

messageFontWeight

Sets the font weight for actor<->actor messages

“trebuchet ms”, verdana, arial