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Sualeh Fatehi
Sualeh Fatehi

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Create Nice-looking Schema Diagrams in PlantUML

PlantUML is a descriptive language to generate a number of types of software diagrams, such as sequence, class, deployment and state diagrams, and many others. PlantUML does not generate very good-looking schema diagrams out of the box, but it supports themes and preprocessed macros. If you use themes and macros, you can not only use a simplified syntax, but also generate beautiful diagrams.

Here is an example of a PlantUML schema diagram, and we will build up the code to generate it.

Schema diagram

To start, describe your schemas, tables and columns using this syntax as an example.

$schema("PUBLISHER_SALES", "id_7f7f6c20") {

  $table("SALES", "id_751e68cc") {
    $column("POSTALCODE"): VARCHAR NOT NULL
    $column("COUNTRY"): VARCHAR NOT NULL
    $fk("BOOKID"): INTEGER
    $fk("COUPON_ID"): INTEGER
    $column("PERIODENDDATE"): DATE
    $column("TOTALAMOUNT"): DOUBLE
  }

}
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You can pick any id, as long as it is unique across the diagram. This will allow you to have tables with the same name in different schemas.

Then, using those ids, you can define foreign key relationships like this:

id_208b5502.id_f521e766::ID  ||--o{ id_208b5502.id_ead84c5d::AUTHORID : FK_AUTHOR
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The secret sauce to this meta-language is in the file header, and it looks like this:

!theme plain
hide empty methods

!procedure $schema($name, $slug)
package "$name" as $slug <<Rectangle>>
!endprocedure

!procedure $table($name, $slug)
entity "<b>$name</b>" as $slug << (T, Orange) table >>
!endprocedure

!procedure $view($name, $slug)
entity "<b>$name</b>" as $slug << (V, Aquamarine) view >>
!endprocedure

!procedure $pk($name)
<color:#GoldenRod><&key></color> <b>$name</b>
!endprocedure

!procedure $fk($name)
<color:#Silver><&key></color> $name
!endprocedure

!procedure $column($name)
{field} <color:#White><&media-record></color> $name
!endprocedure
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Here is an example file with everything put together. You can visualize diagram this online using PlantText editor, and then create your own.

Take a look at SchemaCrawler, which extends functionality by connecting to your database server and generating a PlantUML schema diagram from it using this technique.

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