Layout is determined dymanically, so can be tricky if you are trying to get a specific layout, but you can usually beat it into submission with a combination of the following:
class1 -> class2 ' horizontal placement class2 --> class3 ' vertical placement class4 -left-> class4 ' left placementc1 c2 c3 c4
You can use left
, right
, up
, and down
to control placement direction.
If adding a link screws up the class placement you can use [norank]
to exclude the link from the layout process:
' link will not affect class placement c4 -[norank]-> c2c1 c2 c3 c4
You can also use [hidden]
to create invisible links solely for the purpose of influencing the layout. Repeating them will increase the likelihood that the classes will be placed closer and even be aligned with each other:
' place c2 and c4 closer together c2 -[hidden]-> c4c1 c2 c3 c4
' repeated again to place c2 and c4 even closer c2 -[hidden]-> c4c1 c2 c3 c4
Note that although the links are hidden they still affecting the drawing of links on the same path. If you temporarily remove the [hidden]
option you can see what is going on:
You can fiddle with the ordering and direction to ensure the one that is being drawn is in the place that you want it (usually in the middle). The trick is to use identical links with the same class ordering and direction. If you want the link drawn in the opposite direction you can't flip the order of the classes - you need to swap the placement of the arrow:
' place c2 and c4 closer c2 -[hidden]- c4
' draw the actual link between the hidden links c2 <-[norank]- c4
' place c2 and c4 even closer c2 -[hidden]- c4
Understanding how the layout engine works (GraphVis) makes it easier to get what you want. The previous example with the [hidden]
and [norank]
links got weird because we were giving the layout engine conflicting information.
The layout is determined by the order that classes occur. Classes are drawn at the top of the document have higher ranking than those below.
The rank is determined by:
higher -> lower
Link direction can have a dramatic impact. If we add a c4 --> c2
link we confuse the engine by having c4
on the left which gives it a higher ranking than c2
and causes the diagram to flip upside down:
class c1 c1 -> c2 c2 --> c3 c3 -left-> c4
' whoops, this flips the diagram on its head c4 --> c2
Drawing links from the top down prevents this re-ranking problem, and means you don't have to use [norank]
as often. Since the arrow direction has no effect on the layout we can just flip the end that the arrow is drawn at to account for the link being in a different order:
' ranking maintained, so layout isn't dramatically affected ' arrow drawn at opposite end to account for reverse order c2 <-- c4c1 c2 c3 c4
We could have also used the up
layout hint to prevent the re-ranking:
c4 -up-> c2
You can change the ranking direction from vertical to horizontal using left to right direction
:
left to right direction
class c1 c1 -> c2 c2 --> c3 c3 -left-> c4 c2 <-- c4
This also changes the meaning of the layout hints. Horizontal hints become vertical, etc.
You can control the spacing between class using the NodeSep
and RankSep
skinparams.
SkinParam { NodeSep 45 ' horizontal spacing RankSep 45 ' vertical spacing }