- Add rules/ directory documentation to both files - Update skill count from 25 to 15 modules - Remove beads references (issue tracking removed) - Update skills list with current active skills - Document flake.nix as proper Nix flake (not flake=false) - Add rules system integration section - Clean up sisyphus planning artifacts - Remove deprecated skills (memory, msteams, outlook)
545 lines
24 KiB
Markdown
545 lines
24 KiB
Markdown
---
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name: excalidraw
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description: "Create Excalidraw diagram JSON files that make visual arguments. Use when: (1) user wants to visualize workflows, architectures, or concepts, (2) creating system diagrams, (3) generating .excalidraw files. Triggers: excalidraw, diagram, visualize, architecture diagram, system diagram."
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compatibility: opencode
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---
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# Excalidraw Diagram Creator
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Generate `.excalidraw` JSON files that **argue visually**, not just display information.
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## Customization
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**All colors and brand-specific styles live in one file:** `references/color-palette.md`. Read it before generating any diagram and use it as the single source of truth for all color choices — shape fills, strokes, text colors, evidence artifact backgrounds, everything.
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To make this skill produce diagrams in your own brand style, edit `color-palette.md`. Everything else in this file is universal design methodology and Excalidraw best practices.
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---
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## Core Philosophy
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**Diagrams should ARGUE, not DISPLAY.**
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A diagram isn't formatted text. It's a visual argument that shows relationships, causality, and flow that words alone can't express. The shape should BE the meaning.
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**The Isomorphism Test**: If you removed all text, would the structure alone communicate the concept? If not, redesign.
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**The Education Test**: Could someone learn something concrete from this diagram, or does it just label boxes? A good diagram teaches—it shows actual formats, real event names, concrete examples.
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---
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## Depth Assessment (Do This First)
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Before designing, determine what level of detail this diagram needs:
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### Simple/Conceptual Diagrams
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Use abstract shapes when:
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- Explaining a mental model or philosophy
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- The audience doesn't need technical specifics
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- The concept IS the abstraction (e.g., "separation of concerns")
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### Comprehensive/Technical Diagrams
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Use concrete examples when:
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- Diagramming a real system, protocol, or architecture
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- The diagram will be used to teach or explain (e.g., YouTube video)
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- The audience needs to understand what things actually look like
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- You're showing how multiple technologies integrate
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**For technical diagrams, you MUST include evidence artifacts** (see below).
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---
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## Research Mandate (For Technical Diagrams)
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**Before drawing anything technical, research the actual specifications.**
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If you're diagramming a protocol, API, or framework:
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1. Look up the actual JSON/data formats
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2. Find the real event names, method names, or API endpoints
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3. Understand how the pieces actually connect
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4. Use real terminology, not generic placeholders
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Bad: "Protocol" → "Frontend"
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Good: "AG-UI streams events (RUN_STARTED, STATE_DELTA, A2UI_UPDATE)" → "CopilotKit renders via createA2UIMessageRenderer()"
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**Research makes diagrams accurate AND educational.**
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---
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## Evidence Artifacts
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Evidence artifacts are concrete examples that prove your diagram is accurate and help viewers learn. Include them in technical diagrams.
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**Types of evidence artifacts** (choose what's relevant to your diagram):
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| Artifact Type | When to Use | How to Render |
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|---------------|-------------|---------------|
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| **Code snippets** | APIs, integrations, implementation details | Dark rectangle + syntax-colored text (see color palette for evidence artifact colors) |
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| **Data/JSON examples** | Data formats, schemas, payloads | Dark rectangle + colored text (see color palette) |
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| **Event/step sequences** | Protocols, workflows, lifecycles | Timeline pattern (line + dots + labels) |
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| **UI mockups** | Showing actual output/results | Nested rectangles mimicking real UI |
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| **Real input content** | Showing what goes IN to a system | Rectangle with sample content visible |
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| **API/method names** | Real function calls, endpoints | Use actual names from docs, not placeholders |
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**Example**: For a diagram about a streaming protocol, you might show:
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- The actual event names from the spec (not just "Event 1", "Event 2")
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- A code snippet showing how to connect
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- What the streamed data actually looks like
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**Example**: For a diagram about a data transformation pipeline:
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- Show sample input data (actual format, not "Input")
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- Show sample output data (actual format, not "Output")
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- Show intermediate states if relevant
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The key principle: **show what things actually look like**, not just what they're called.
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---
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## Multi-Zoom Architecture
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Comprehensive diagrams operate at multiple zoom levels simultaneously. Think of it like a map that shows both the country borders AND the street names.
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### Level 1: Summary Flow
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A simplified overview showing the full pipeline or process at a glance. Often placed at the top or bottom of the diagram.
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*Example*: `Input → Processing → Output` or `Client → Server → Database`
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### Level 2: Section Boundaries
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Labeled regions that group related components. These create visual "rooms" that help viewers understand what belongs together.
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*Example*: Grouping by responsibility (Backend / Frontend), by phase (Setup / Execution / Cleanup), or by team (User / System / External)
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### Level 3: Detail Inside Sections
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Evidence artifacts, code snippets, and concrete examples within each section. This is where the educational value lives.
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*Example*: Inside a "Backend" section, you might show the actual API response format, not just a box labeled "API Response"
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**For comprehensive diagrams, aim to include all three levels.** The summary gives context, the sections organize, and the details teach.
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### Bad vs Good
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| Bad (Displaying) | Good (Arguing) |
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|------------------|----------------|
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| 5 equal boxes with labels | Each concept has a shape that mirrors its behavior |
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| Card grid layout | Visual structure matches conceptual structure |
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| Icons decorating text | Shapes that ARE the meaning |
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| Same container for everything | Distinct visual vocabulary per concept |
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| Everything in a box | Free-floating text with selective containers |
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### Simple vs Comprehensive (Know Which You Need)
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| Simple Diagram | Comprehensive Diagram |
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|----------------|----------------------|
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| Generic labels: "Input" → "Process" → "Output" | Specific: shows what the input/output actually looks like |
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| Named boxes: "API", "Database", "Client" | Named boxes + examples of actual requests/responses |
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| "Events" or "Messages" label | Timeline with real event/message names from the spec |
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| "UI" or "Dashboard" rectangle | Mockup showing actual UI elements and content |
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| ~30 seconds to explain | ~2-3 minutes of teaching content |
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| Viewer learns the structure | Viewer learns the structure AND the details |
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**Simple diagrams** are fine for abstract concepts, quick overviews, or when the audience already knows the details. **Comprehensive diagrams** are needed for technical architectures, tutorials, educational content, or when you want the diagram itself to teach.
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---
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## Container vs. Free-Floating Text
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**Not every piece of text needs a shape around it.** Default to free-floating text. Add containers only when they serve a purpose.
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| Use a Container When... | Use Free-Floating Text When... |
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|------------------------|-------------------------------|
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| It's the focal point of a section | It's a label or description |
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| It needs visual grouping with other elements | It's supporting detail or metadata |
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| Arrows need to connect to it | It describes something nearby |
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| The shape itself carries meaning (decision diamond, etc.) | It's a section title, subtitle, or annotation |
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| It represents a distinct "thing" in the system | It's a section title, subtitle, or annotation |
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**Typography as hierarchy**: Use font size, weight, and color to create visual hierarchy without boxes. A 28px title doesn't need a rectangle around it.
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**The container test**: For each boxed element, ask "Would this work as free-floating text?" If yes, remove the container.
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---
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## Design Process (Do This BEFORE Generating JSON)
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### Step 0: Assess Depth Required
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Before anything else, determine if this needs to be:
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- **Simple/Conceptual**: Abstract shapes, labels, relationships (mental models, philosophies)
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- **Comprehensive/Technical**: Concrete examples, code snippets, real data (systems, architectures, tutorials)
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**If comprehensive**: Do research first. Look up actual specs, formats, event names, APIs.
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### Step 1: Understand Deeply
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Read the content. For each concept, ask:
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- What does this concept **DO**? (not what IS it)
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- What relationships exist between concepts?
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- What's the core transformation or flow?
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- **What would someone need to SEE to understand this?** (not just read about)
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### Step 2: Map Concepts to Patterns
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For each concept, find the visual pattern that mirrors its behavior:
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| If the concept... | Use this pattern |
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|-------------------|------------------|
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| Spawns multiple outputs | **Fan-out** (radial arrows from center) |
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| Combines inputs into one | **Convergence** (funnel, arrows merging) |
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| Has hierarchy/nesting | **Tree** (lines + free-floating text) |
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| Is a sequence of steps | **Timeline** (line + dots + free-floating labels) |
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| Loops or improves continuously | **Spiral/Cycle** (arrow returning to start) |
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| Is an abstract state or context | **Cloud** (overlapping ellipses) |
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| Transforms input to output | **Assembly line** (before → process → after) |
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| Compares two things | **Side-by-side** (parallel with contrast) |
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| Separates into phases | **Gap/Break** (visual separation between sections) |
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### Step 3: Ensure Variety
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For multi-concept diagrams: **each major concept must use a different visual pattern**. No uniform cards or grids.
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### Step 4: Sketch the Flow
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Before JSON, mentally trace how the eye moves through the diagram. There should be a clear visual story.
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### Step 5: Generate JSON
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Only now create the Excalidraw elements. **See below for how to handle large diagrams.**
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### Step 6: Render & Validate (MANDATORY)
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After generating the JSON, you MUST run the render-view-fix loop until the diagram looks right. This is not optional — see the **Render & Validate** section below for the full process.
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---
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## Large / Comprehensive Diagram Strategy
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**For comprehensive or technical diagrams, you MUST build the JSON one section at a time.** Do NOT attempt to generate the entire file in a single pass. This is a hard constraint — output token limits mean a comprehensive diagram easily exceeds capacity in one shot. Even if it didn't, generating everything at once leads to worse quality. Section-by-section is better in every way.
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### The Section-by-Section Workflow
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**Phase 1: Build each section**
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1. **Create the base file** with the JSON wrapper (`type`, `version`, `appState`, `files`) and the first section of elements.
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2. **Add one section per edit.** Each section gets its own dedicated pass — take your time with it. Think carefully about the layout, spacing, and how this section connects to what's already there.
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3. **Use descriptive string IDs** (e.g., `"trigger_rect"`, `"arrow_fan_left"`) so cross-section references are readable.
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4. **Namespace seeds by section** (e.g., section 1 uses 100xxx, section 2 uses 200xxx) to avoid collisions.
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5. **Update cross-section bindings** as you go. When a new section's element needs to bind to an element from a previous section (e.g., an arrow connecting sections), edit the earlier element's `boundElements` array at the same time.
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**Phase 2: Review the whole**
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After all sections are in place, read through the complete JSON and check:
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- Are cross-section arrows bound correctly on both ends?
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- Is the overall spacing balanced, or are some sections cramped while others have too much whitespace?
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- Do IDs and bindings all reference elements that actually exist?
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Fix any alignment or binding issues before rendering.
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**Phase 3: Render & validate**
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Now run the render-view-fix loop from the Render & Validate section. This is where you'll catch visual issues that aren't obvious from JSON — overlaps, clipping, imbalanced composition.
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### Section Boundaries
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Plan your sections around natural visual groupings from the diagram plan. A typical large diagram might split into:
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- **Section 1**: Entry point / trigger
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- **Section 2**: First decision or routing
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- **Section 3**: Main content (hero section — may be the largest single section)
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- **Section 4-N**: Remaining phases, outputs, etc.
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Each section should be independently understandable: its elements, internal arrows, and any cross-references to adjacent sections.
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### What NOT to Do
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- **Don't generate the entire diagram in one response.** You will hit the output token limit and produce truncated, broken JSON. Even if the diagram is small enough to fit, splitting into sections produces better results.
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- **Don't write a Python generator script.** The templating and coordinate math seem helpful but introduce a layer of indirection that makes debugging harder. Hand-crafted JSON with descriptive IDs is more maintainable.
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---
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## Visual Pattern Library
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### Fan-Out (One-to-Many)
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Central element with arrows radiating to multiple targets. Use for: sources, PRDs, root causes, central hubs.
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```
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○
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↗
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□ → ○
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↘
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○
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```
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### Convergence (Many-to-One)
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Multiple inputs merging through arrows to single output. Use for: aggregation, funnels, synthesis.
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```
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○ ↘
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○ → □
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○ ↗
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```
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### Tree (Hierarchy)
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Parent-child branching with connecting lines and free-floating text (no boxes needed). Use for: file systems, org charts, taxonomies.
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```
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label
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├── label
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│ ├── label
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│ └── label
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└── label
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```
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Use `line` elements for the trunk and branches, free-floating text for labels.
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### Spiral/Cycle (Continuous Loop)
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Elements in sequence with arrow returning to start. Use for: feedback loops, iterative processes, evolution.
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```
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□ → □
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↑ ↓
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□ ← □
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```
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### Cloud (Abstract State)
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Overlapping ellipses with varied sizes. Use for: context, memory, conversations, mental states.
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### Assembly Line (Transformation)
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Input → Process Box → Output with clear before/after. Use for: transformations, processing, conversion.
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```
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○○○ → [PROCESS] → □□□
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chaos order
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```
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### Side-by-Side (Comparison)
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Two parallel structures with visual contrast. Use for: before/after, options, trade-offs.
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### Gap/Break (Separation)
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Visual whitespace or barrier between sections. Use for: phase changes, context resets, boundaries.
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### Lines as Structure
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Use lines (type: `line`, not arrows) as primary structural elements instead of boxes:
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- **Timelines**: Vertical or horizontal line with small dots (10-20px ellipses) at intervals, free-floating labels beside each dot
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- **Tree structures**: Vertical trunk line + horizontal branch lines, with free-floating text labels (no boxes needed)
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- **Dividers**: Thin dashed lines to separate sections
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- **Flow spines**: A central line that elements relate to, rather than connecting boxes
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```
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Timeline: Tree:
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●─── Label 1 │
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│ ├── item
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●─── Label 2 │ ├── sub
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│ │ └── sub
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●─── Label 3 └── item
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```
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Lines + free-floating text often creates a cleaner result than boxes + contained text.
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---
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## Shape Meaning
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Choose shape based on what it represents—or use no shape at all:
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| Concept Type | Shape | Why |
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|--------------|-------|-----|
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| Labels, descriptions, details | **none** (free-floating text) | Typography creates hierarchy |
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| Section titles, annotations | **none** (free-floating text) | Font size/weight is enough |
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| Markers on a timeline | small `ellipse` (10-20px) | Visual anchor, not container |
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| Start, trigger, input | `ellipse` | Soft, origin-like |
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| End, output, result | `ellipse` | Completion, destination |
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| Decision, condition | `diamond` | Classic decision symbol |
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| Process, action, step | `rectangle` | Contained action |
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| Abstract state, context | overlapping `ellipse` | Fuzzy, cloud-like |
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| Hierarchy node | lines + text (no boxes) | Structure through lines |
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**Rule**: Default to no container. Add shapes only when they carry meaning. Aim for <30% of text elements to be inside containers.
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---
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## Color as Meaning
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Colors encode information, not decoration. Every color choice should come from `references/color-palette.md` — the semantic shape colors, text hierarchy colors, and evidence artifact colors are all defined there.
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**Key principles:**
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- Each semantic purpose (start, end, decision, AI, error, etc.) has a specific fill/stroke pair
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- Free-floating text uses color for hierarchy (titles, subtitles, details — each at a different level)
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- Evidence artifacts (code snippets, JSON examples) use their own dark background + colored text scheme
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- Always pair a darker stroke with a lighter fill for contrast
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**Do not invent new colors.** If a concept doesn't fit an existing semantic category, use Primary/Neutral or Secondary.
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---
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## Modern Aesthetics
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For clean, professional diagrams:
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### Roughness
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- `roughness: 0` — Clean, crisp edges. Use for modern/technical diagrams.
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- `roughness: 1` — Hand-drawn, organic feel. Use for brainstorming/informal diagrams.
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**Default to 0** for most professional use cases.
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### Stroke Width
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- `strokeWidth: 1` — Thin, elegant. Good for lines, dividers, subtle connections.
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- `strokeWidth: 2` — Standard. Good for shapes and primary arrows.
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- `strokeWidth: 3` — Bold. Use sparingly for emphasis (main flow line, key connections).
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### Opacity
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**Always use `opacity: 100` for all elements.** Use color, size, and stroke width to create hierarchy instead of transparency.
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### Small Markers Instead of Shapes
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Instead of full shapes, use small dots (10-20px ellipses) as:
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- Timeline markers
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- Bullet points
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- Connection nodes
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- Visual anchors for free-floating text
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---
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## Layout Principles
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### Hierarchy Through Scale
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- **Hero**: 300×150 - visual anchor, most important
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- **Primary**: 180×90
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- **Secondary**: 120×60
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- **Small**: 60×40
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### Whitespace = Importance
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The most important element has the most empty space around it (200px+).
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### Flow Direction
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Guide the eye: typically left→right or top→bottom for sequences, radial for hub-and-spoke.
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### Connections Required
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Position alone doesn't show relationships. If A relates to B, there must be an arrow.
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---
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## Text Rules
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**CRITICAL**: The JSON `text` property contains ONLY readable words.
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```json
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{
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"id": "myElement1",
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"text": "Start",
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"originalText": "Start"
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}
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```
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Settings: `fontSize: 16`, `fontFamily: 3`, `textAlign: "center"`, `verticalAlign: "middle"`
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---
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## JSON Structure
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```json
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{
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"type": "excalidraw",
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"version": 2,
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"source": "https://excalidraw.com",
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"elements": [...],
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"appState": {
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"viewBackgroundColor": "#ffffff",
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"gridSize": 20
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},
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"files": {}
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}
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```
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## Element Templates
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See `references/element-templates.md` for copy-paste JSON templates for each element type (text, line, dot, rectangle, arrow). Pull colors from `references/color-palette.md` based on each element's semantic purpose.
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---
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## Render & Validate (MANDATORY)
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You cannot judge a diagram from JSON alone. After generating or editing the Excalidraw JSON, you MUST render it to PNG, view the image, and fix what you see — in a loop until it's right. This is a core part of the workflow, not a final check.
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### How to Render
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Run the render script from the skill's `references/` directory:
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```bash
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python3 <skill-references-dir>/render_excalidraw.py <path-to-file.excalidraw>
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```
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This outputs a PNG next to the `.excalidraw` file. Then use the **Read tool** on the PNG to actually view it.
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### The Loop
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After generating the initial JSON, run this cycle:
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**1. Render & View** — Run the render script, then Read the PNG.
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**2. Audit against your original vision** — Before looking for bugs, compare the rendered result to what you designed in Steps 1-4. Ask:
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- Does the visual structure match the conceptual structure you planned?
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- Does each section use the pattern you intended (fan-out, convergence, timeline, etc.)?
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- Does the eye flow through the diagram in the order you designed?
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- Is the visual hierarchy correct — hero elements dominant, supporting elements smaller?
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- For technical diagrams: are the evidence artifacts (code snippets, data examples) readable and properly placed?
|
||
|
||
**3. Check for visual defects:**
|
||
- Text clipped by or overflowing its container
|
||
- Text or shapes overlapping other elements
|
||
- Arrows crossing through elements instead of routing around them
|
||
- Arrows landing on the wrong element or pointing into empty space
|
||
- Labels floating ambiguously (not clearly anchored to what they describe)
|
||
- Uneven spacing between elements that should be evenly spaced
|
||
- Sections with too much whitespace next to sections that are too cramped
|
||
- Text too small to read at the rendered size
|
||
- Overall composition feels lopsided or unbalanced
|
||
|
||
**4. Fix** — Edit the JSON to address everything you found. Common fixes:
|
||
- Widen containers when text is clipped
|
||
- Adjust `x`/`y` coordinates to fix spacing and alignment
|
||
- Add intermediate waypoints to arrow `points` arrays to route around elements
|
||
- Reposition labels closer to the element they describe
|
||
- Resize elements to rebalance visual weight across sections
|
||
|
||
**5. Re-render & re-view** — Run the render script again and Read the new PNG.
|
||
|
||
**6. Repeat** — Keep cycling until the diagram passes both the vision check (Step 2) and the defect check (Step 3). Typically takes 2-4 iterations. Don't stop after one pass just because there are no critical bugs — if the composition could be better, improve it.
|
||
|
||
### When to Stop
|
||
|
||
The loop is done when:
|
||
- The rendered diagram matches the conceptual design from your planning steps
|
||
- No text is clipped, overlapping, or unreadable
|
||
- Arrows route cleanly and connect to the right elements
|
||
- Spacing is consistent and the composition is balanced
|
||
- You'd be comfortable showing it to someone without caveats
|
||
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
## Quality Checklist
|
||
|
||
### Depth & Evidence (Check First for Technical Diagrams)
|
||
1. **Research done**: Did you look up actual specs, formats, event names?
|
||
2. **Evidence artifacts**: Are there code snippets, JSON examples, or real data?
|
||
3. **Multi-zoom**: Does it have summary flow + section boundaries + detail?
|
||
4. **Concrete over abstract**: Real content shown, not just labeled boxes?
|
||
5. **Educational value**: Could someone learn something concrete from this?
|
||
|
||
### Conceptual
|
||
6. **Isomorphism**: Does each visual structure mirror its concept's behavior?
|
||
7. **Argument**: Does the diagram SHOW something text alone couldn't?
|
||
8. **Variety**: Does each major concept use a different visual pattern?
|
||
9. **No uniform containers**: Avoided card grids and equal boxes?
|
||
|
||
### Container Discipline
|
||
10. **Minimal containers**: Could any boxed element work as free-floating text instead?
|
||
11. **Lines as structure**: Are tree/timeline patterns using lines + text rather than boxes?
|
||
12. **Typography hierarchy**: Are font size and color creating visual hierarchy (reducing need for boxes)?
|
||
|
||
### Structural
|
||
13. **Connections**: Every relationship has an arrow or line
|
||
14. **Flow**: Clear visual path for the eye to follow
|
||
15. **Hierarchy**: Important elements are larger/more isolated
|
||
|
||
### Technical
|
||
16. **Text clean**: `text` contains only readable words
|
||
17. **Font**: `fontFamily: 3`
|
||
18. **Roughness**: `roughness: 0` for clean/modern (unless hand-drawn style requested)
|
||
19. **Opacity**: `opacity: 100` for all elements (no transparency)
|
||
20. **Container ratio**: <30% of text elements should be inside containers
|
||
|
||
### Visual Validation (Render Required)
|
||
21. **Rendered to PNG**: Diagram has been rendered and visually inspected
|
||
22. **No text overflow**: All text fits within its container
|
||
23. **No overlapping elements**: Shapes and text don't overlap unintentionally
|
||
24. **Even spacing**: Similar elements have consistent spacing
|
||
25. **Arrows land correctly**: Arrows connect to intended elements without crossing others
|
||
26. **Readable at export size**: Text is legible in the rendered PNG
|
||
27. **Balanced composition**: No large empty voids or overcrowded regions
|