umlet.com -- info@umlet.com -- patreon.com/umlet
UMLet is an open-source Java tool for rapidly drawing UML diagrams. Upload from Mac to Instagram multiple photos and videos, edit pictures, add hashtags and emojis, use multiple Instagram accounts. This handy Instagram uploader for Mac is a perfect desktop solution for Instagrammers. New in UMLet 1.0. Easy editing of element attributes using a text editor panel. Full fledged undo and redo support. Right mouse button not needed any more, therefore useable on Windows, Linux, Macintosh OS X and other operating systems. Support for new diagram types. Use OS's default scrollbar in Mac OS X #147; Brackets conflicts #122; Auto Layout Diagram #49; 2.0.0-beta.1 (2014/05/18) The first public release. New versioning scheme. (Previous StarUML version is v5.0, but we do not use the version number no more and we use new version number starting from 2.0.0). Brief introduction to the free, open-source UML tool UMLet available at http://www.umlet.com.
>> For a new diagram, create an empty text file with a '.uxf'-extension! <<
Then you can
- double click on a UML element in the palette;
- edit it in the lower-right markdown panel; or
- drag the background to move the whole diagram.
You're ready to go -- enjoy!
UMLet is a free, open-source UML tool with a simple user interface: draw UML diagrams fast, build sequence and activity diagrams from plain text, export diagrams to eps, pdf, jpg, svg, and clipboard, and create new custom UML elements.
It runs
- as stand-alone UMLet on Windows, macOS, and Linux;
- as Eclipse plug-in;
- as Web-based app UMLetino; and
- as VS Code extension.
The stand-alone version has the most extensive feature set; here is a brief tutorial video.
Early UML tools were often a bit cumbersome -- they relied on pop-up windows to set attributes, and aimed at model consistency up to an ever-allusive round-trip engineering.
UMLet main goal is to allow users to sketch UML (and other) diagrams fast.
It uses a pop-up-free, markdown-based way of quickly editing elements. Even the direction or type of a relation is changed with just a few keystrokes.
It lets users learn about UML elements of various complexity by providing palettes of many element variants as templates or prototypes. Just double-click on any element and tweak the clone. You can even modify the palettes as if you'd edit a normal diagram -- no more icon guessing.
Download gta 5 zip.7z. It supports more complex element types like activity or sequence diagrams, with their own tailored markdown dialect. With more generic, non-UML elements, you can even draw any kind of 'boxy' diagram usually done in Word or PowerPoint.
It allows users to create their own custom elements. An element's look can be modified at run-time by changing a few lines of Java code; UMLet then compiles the new element's code on the fly and displays it. Without leaving UMLet, users can thus create and add new graphical element types. (Stand-alone only, for now.)
It provides simple batch processing on the command line. You can thus convert the uxf-format (an XML dialect) to various file formats, e.g., for you LaTeX workflow.
Play with our codebase, or create tickets on Github.
Find more examples in our screenshots and sample diagrams.
Read about UMLet's underlying ideas in our papers.
Umlet Mac Install Software
One technical issue still niggles us: handling copy/paste commands if triggerend via the menu on Windows, as there the focus is lost. We also use a 'custom visual editor' -- those are just a bit problematic as activeTextEditor becomes null if another custom editor gets activated. If you have any idea to better our current heuristic, let us know (and claim our bottle of Italian red)!
Umlet Mac Installer
We highly appreciate your support!
Please send feedback and bug reports to info@umlet.com, or create a ticket on Github. Especially if you teach UML, let us know which element types you're still missing.
Follow @twumlet on Twitter, or visit us on Facebook.
If you like UMLet, please find the time to rate it -- we'd really enjoy that!
(Finally, *cough*, we're also on PayPal and Patreon.)
To our past contributors (chronologically) Thomas Tschurtschenthaler, Ludwig Meyer, Johannes Pölz, Elisabeth Blümelhuber, Julian Thöndel, and Thomas Bretterbauer: thanks! The UMLet Team -- Martin Auer, Andreas Fürnweger
umlet.com -- info@umlet.com -- patreon.com/umlet