SKILL.md
Draw.io Diagrams
Overview
Generate .drawio XML files and export to PNG/SVG/PDF/JPG locally using the native draw.io desktop app CLI.
Supported formats: PNG, SVG, PDF, JPG — no browser automation needed.
PNG, SVG, and PDF exports support --embed-diagram (-e) — the exported file contains the full diagram XML, so opening it in draw.io recovers the editable diagram. Use double extensions (name.drawio.png) to signal embedded XML.
Bundled resources
When the workflow references one of these, read it on demand — none of them need to be in context up front.
File
Read it when
references/diagram-types.md
The user names a specific diagram type (ERD, UML class, sequence, architecture, ML/DL, flowchart)
references/style-presets.md
The user asks to learn / save / list / set-default / delete a style preset, or you've resolved an active preset and need the application rules
references/style-extraction.md
You're inside the Learn flow and need the extraction procedure (called from style-presets.md)
references/troubleshooting.md
An export fails, vision rejects a PNG, or a rendering looks wrong
scripts/repair_png.py
After every -e PNG export — fixes draw.io's truncated IEND chunk (issue #8)
scripts/encode_drawio_url.py
The CLI is unavailable and you need a browser-fallback diagrams.net URL
Prerequisites
The draw.io desktop app must be installed and the CLI accessible:
macOS sandbox / sandbox isolation note (e.g., codex.app): In some sandboxed macOS environments, invoking the draw.io desktop CLI (even draw.io --version) can crash the draw.io process or produce no output. If that happens, treat the CLI as unavailable in this sandbox isolation — do not keep retrying inside the sandbox. Prefer a non-sandboxed host environment (outside sandbox isolation) for any CLI export work, or use the browser fallback / XML-only outputs.
# macOS (Homebrew — recommended; CLI binary is `drawio`, not `draw.io`)
brew install --cask drawio
drawio --version
# macOS (full path if not in PATH)
/Applications/draw.io.app/Contents/MacOS/draw.io --version
# Windows
"C:\Program Files\draw.io\draw.io.exe" --version
# Linux
draw.io --version
Install draw.io desktop if missing:
- macOS:
brew install --cask drawioor download from https://github.com/jgraph/drawio-desktop/releases
- Windows: download installer from https://github.com/jgraph/drawio-desktop/releases
- Linux: download
.deb/.rpmfrom https://github.com/jgraph/drawio-desktop/releases — do not use snap (AppArmor sandbox denies secrets/keyring on servers, causes crash)
Workflow
Before starting the workflow, assess whether the user's request is specific enough. If key details are missing, ask 1-3 focused questions:
- Diagram type — which preset? (ERD, UML, Sequence, Architecture, ML/DL, Flowchart, or general)
- Output format — PNG (default), SVG, PDF, or JPG?
- Output location — default is the user's working dir; honor any explicit path the user gives (e.g. "put it in
./artifacts/"). Don't ask if they didn't mention one.
- Scope/fidelity — how many components? Any specific technologies or labels?
Skip clarification if the request already specifies these details or is clearly simple (e.g., "draw a flowchart of X").
Step 0 — Resolve active preset. Determine which (if any) user-defined style preset applies to this generation.
- Scan the user's message for a phrase that clearly names a style preset: "use my
<name>style", "with my<name>style", "in<name>mode", "in the style of<name>". A barewith <name>does not count — "draw a diagram with redis" names a component, not a style. If a clear match is found → active preset =<name>.
- Else, check
~/.drawio-skill/styles/for any file with"default": true. If found → active preset = that one.
- Else → no preset active; fall through to the built-in color/shape/edge conventions for the rest of the workflow.
Load the preset JSON from ~/.drawio-skill/styles/<name>.json, falling back to <this-skill-dir>/styles/built-in/<name>.json. If the named preset exists in neither location, tell the user the name is unknown, list the available presets (user dir + built-in), and stop — do not silently fall back to defaults.
When a preset loads successfully, mention it in the first line of the reply: "Using preset <name> (confidence: <level>)." See the Applying a preset subsection below for how the preset changes color/shape/edge/font decisions.
- Check deps — verify
draw.io --versionsucceeds; note platform for correct CLI path
- Plan — identify shapes, relationships, layout (LR or TB), group by tier/layer
- Generate — write
.drawioXML file to disk. Default output dir is the user's working dir; if the user specified an output path or directory (e.g../artifacts/,docs/images/), use that instead —mkdir -pthe target dir first. Apply the same dir choice to PNG/SVG/PDF exports in steps 4 and 7.
- Export draft — run CLI to produce a preview PNG. **Do NOT pass
-e** at this step — the embeddedzTXt mxGraphModelchunk it adds causes vision APIs (Claude included) to return 400 "Could not process image" in step 5. Save the clean preview as<name>.png(single extension). Embedding is for the final export only (step 7).
- Self-check — use the agent's built-in vision capability to read the exported PNG, catch obvious issues, auto-fix before showing user (requires a vision-enabled model such as Claude Sonnet/Opus). If reading the PNG returns a 400 / "Could not process image" error, you almost certainly exported with
-eby mistake — re-export without-eand retry once. If it still fails, skip self-check and continue to step 6.
- Review loop — show image to user, collect feedback, apply targeted XML edits, re-export, repeat until approved
- Final export — re-export the approved version to all requested formats. Use
-ehere (PNG/SVG/PDF) so the deliverable stays editable in draw.io; save as<name>.drawio.pngto signal embedded XML. **For PNG with-e, runpython3 <this-skill-dir>/scripts/repair_png.py <name>.drawio.pngimmediately after** — draw.io's CLI truncates the IEND chunk in-ePNG output (8 bytes missing), producing a corrupt file that vision APIs and strict PNG decoders reject (issue #8). Report file paths.
**If draw.io --version crashes or prints nothing (common in restricted macOS sandbox isolation like codex.app):**
- Do not keep retrying CLI invocations inside the sandbox.
- Skip steps 4, 5, 6, and 7 (CLI export + PNG-based review) and use Browser fallback (
scripts/encode_drawio_url.py) or deliver the.drawioXML only.
- If the user needs PNG/SVG/PDF outputs, ask them to run the export commands in a non-sandboxed host environment (outside sandbox isolation) and share the resulting files.
Escalation rule:
- If the binary exists on PATH (or known app path exists) but execution fails with abnormal exit, empty output, Electron startup failure, display/session error, or likely sandbox restriction, prefer one escalated retry before falling back.
- If the binary is missing entirely, do not escalate just to search more aggressively; go to install guidance or fallback.
Step 5: Self-Check
After exporting the draft PNG, use the agent's vision capability (e.g., Claude's image input) to read the image and check for these issues before showing the user. If the agent does not support vision, skip self-check and show the PNG directly.
Important: the draft PNG read here must have been exported without -e. Draw.io's -e flag emits a PNG with a truncated IEND chunk (8 bytes of type+CRC missing) that the Anthropic vision API rejects with 400 "Could not process image" (issue #8). The simplest fix for the preview step is to skip -e entirely; the final export in step 7 keeps -e and runs the repair snippet. If you see the 400 error here, re-export without -e and retry once; if it still fails (any other reason), skip self-check and proceed to step 6.
Check
What to look for
Auto-fix action
Overlapping shapes
Two or more shapes stacked on top of each other
Shift shapes apart by ≥200px
Clipped labels
Text cut off at shape boundaries
Increase shape width/height to fit label
Missing connections
Arrows that don't visually connect to shapes
Verify source/target ids match existing cells
Off-canvas shapes
Shapes at negative coordinates or far from the main group
Move to positive coordinates near the cluster
Edge-shape overlap
An edge/arrow visually crosses through an unrelated shape
Add waypoints (<Array as="points">) to route around the shape, or increase spacing between shapes
Stacked edges
Multiple edges overlap each other on the same path
Distribute entry/exit points across the shape perimeter (use different exitX/entryX values)
- Max 2 self-check rounds — if issues remain after 2 fixes, show the user anyway
- Re-export after each fix and re-read the new PNG
Step 6: Review Loop
After self-check, show the exported image and ask the user for feedback.
Targeted edit rules — for each type of feedback, apply the minimal XML change:
User request
XML edit action
Change color of X
Find mxCell by value matching X, update fillColor/strokeColor in style
Add a new node
Append a new mxCell vertex with next available id, position near related nodes
Remove a node
Delete the mxCell vertex and any edges with matching source/target
Move shape X
Update x/y in the mxGeometry of the matching mxCell
Resize shape X
Update width/height in the mxGeometry of the matching mxCell
Add arrow from A to B
Append a new mxCell edge with source/target matching A and B ids
Change label text
Update the value attribute of the matching mxCell
Change layout direction
Full regeneration — rebuild XML with new orientation
Rules:
- For single-element changes: edit existing XML in place — preserves layout tuning from prior iterations
- For layout-wide changes (e.g., swap LR↔TB, "start over"): regenerate full XML
- Overwrite the same
{name}.png(no-e) each iteration — do not createv1,v2,v3files.-eis reserved for the final export in step 7.
- After applying edits, re-export and show the updated image
- Loop continues until user says approved / done / LGTM
- Safety valve: after 5 iteration rounds, suggest the user open the
.drawiofile in draw.io desktop for fine-grained adjustments
Step 7: Final Export
Once the user approves:
- Export to all requested formats (PNG, SVG, PDF, JPG) — default to PNG if not specified
- Report file paths for both the
.drawiosource file and exported image(s)
- Auto-launch: offer to open the
.drawiofile in draw.io desktop for fine-tuning —open diagram.drawio(macOS),xdg-open(Linux),start(Windows)
- Confirm files are saved and ready to use
Style Presets
A style preset is a named JSON file capturing a user's visual preferences (palette, shapes, font, edges). When active, it fully replaces the built-in color/shape conventions in this skill.
Lookup order when SKILL.md's step 0.5 resolves a preset name:
~/.drawio-skill/styles/<name>.json— user presets (survivegit pull)
<this-skill-dir>/styles/built-in/<name>.json— shipped built-ins (default,corporate,handdrawn)
Always lowercase the user-provided name before any file operation — the schema enforces lowercase.
**For everything else — Learn flow (extracting a preset from a file), management ops (list/default/delete/rename), application rules (color lookup, shape keywords, edges, fonts, extras, interaction with diagram-type presets), and validation — read references/style-presets.md.** It's only needed when the user invokes those flows or when an active preset must be applied to the current generation.
Draw.io XML Structure
File skeleton
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<mxfile host="drawio" version="26.0.0">
<diagram name="Page-1">
<mxGraphModel>
<root>
<mxCell id="0" />
<mxCell id="1" parent="0" />
<!-- user shapes start at id="2" -->
</root>
</mxGraphModel>
</diagram>
</mxfile>
Rules:
id="0"andid="1"are required root cells — never omit them
- User shapes start at
id="2"and increment sequentially
- All shapes have
parent="1"(unless inside a container — then use container's id)
- All text uses
html=1in style for proper rendering
- **Never use
--inside XML comments** — it's illegal per XML spec and causes parse errors
- Escape special characters in attribute values:
&amp;,&lt;,&gt;,&quot;
- Multi-line text in labels: use
&#xa;for line breaks insidevalueattributes (not literal\n). Example:value="Line 1&#xa;Line 2"
Shape types (vertex)
Style keyword
Use for
rounded=0
plain rectangle (default)
rounded=1
rounded rectangle — services, modules
ellipse;
circles/ovals — start/end, databases
rhombus;
diamond — decision points
shape=mxgraph.aws4.resourceIcon;
AWS icons
shape=cylinder3;
cylinder — databases
swimlane;
group/container with title bar
Required properties
<!-- Rectangle / rounded box -->
<mxCell id="2" value="Label" style="rounded=1;whiteSpace=wrap;html=1;fillColor=#dae8fc;strokeColor=#6c8ebf;" vertex="1" parent="1">
<mxGeometry x="100" y="100" width="160" height="60" as="geometry" />
</mxCell>
<!-- Cylinder (database) -->
<mxCell id="3" value="DB" style="shape=cylinder3;whiteSpace=wrap;html=1;fillColor=#f5f5f5;strokeColor=#666666;fontColor=#333333;" vertex="1" parent="1">
<mxGeometry x="350" y="100" width="120" height="80" as="geometry" />
</mxCell>
<!-- Diamond (decision) -->
<mxCell id="4" value="Check?" style="rhombus;whiteSpace=wrap;html=1;fillColor=#fff2cc;strokeColor=#d6b656;" vertex="1" parent="1">
<mxGeometry x="100" y="220" width="160" height="80" as="geometry" />
</mxCell>
Containers and groups
For architecture diagrams with nested elements, use draw.io's parent-child containment — do not just place shapes on top of larger shapes.
Type
Style
When to use
Group (invisible)
group;pointerEvents=0;
No visual border needed, container has no connections
Swimlane (titled)
swimlane;startSize=30;
Container needs a visible title bar, or container itself has connections
Custom container
Add container=1;pointerEvents=0; to any shape
Any shape acting as a container without its own connections
Key rules:
- Add
pointerEvents=0;to container styles that should not capture connections between children
- Children set
parent="containerId"and use coordinates relative to the container
<!-- Swimlane container -->
<mxCell id="svc1" value="User Service" style="swimlane;startSize=30;fillColor=#dae8fc;strokeColor=#6c8ebf;" vertex="1" parent="1">
<mxGeometry x="100" y="100" width="300" height="200" as="geometry"/>
</mxCell>
<!-- Child inside container — coordinates relative to parent -->
<mxCell id="api1" value="REST API" style="rounded=1;whiteSpace=wrap;html=1;" vertex="1" parent="svc1">
<mxGeometry x="20" y="40" width="120" height="60" as="geometry"/>
</mxCell>
<mxCell id="db1" value="Database" style="shape=cylinder3;whiteSpace=wrap;html=1;" vertex="1" parent="svc1">
<mxGeometry x="160" y="40" width="120" height="60" as="geometry"/>
</mxCell>
Connector (edge)
CRITICAL: Every edge mxCell must contain a <mxGeometry relative="1" as="geometry" /> child element. Self-closing edge cells (<mxCell ... edge="1" ... />) are invalid and will not render. Always use the expanded form.
<!-- Directed arrow — always include rounded, orthogonalLoop, jettySize for clean routing -->
<mxCell id="10" value="" style="edgeStyle=orthogonalEdgeStyle;rounded=1;orthogonalLoop=1;jettySize=auto;html=1;" edge="1" parent="1" source="2" target="3">
<mxGeometry relative="1" as="geometry" />
</mxCell>
<!-- Arrow with label + explicit entry/exit points to control direction -->
<mxCell id="11" value="HTTP/REST" style="edgeStyle=orthogonalEdgeStyle;rounded=1;orthogonalLoop=1;jettySize=auto;html=1;exitX=0.5;exitY=1;exitDx=0;exitDy=0;entryX=0.5;entryY=0;entryDx=0;entryDy=0;" edge="1" parent="1" source="2" target="4">
<mxGeometry relative="1" as="geometry" />
</mxCell>
<!-- Arrow with waypoints — use when edge must route around other shapes -->
<mxCell id="12" value="" style="edgeStyle=orthogonalEdgeStyle;rounded=1;orthogonalLoop=1;jettySize=auto;html=1;" edge="1" parent="1" source="3" target="5">
<mxGeometry relative="1" as="geometry">
<Array as="points">
<mxPoint x="500" y="50" />
</Array>
</mxGeometry>
</mxCell>
Edge style rules:
- Animated connectors: add
flowAnimation=1;to any edge style to show a moving dot animation along the arrow. Works in SVG export and draw.io desktop — ideal for data-flow and pipeline diagrams. Example:style="edgeStyle=orthogonalEdgeStyle;flowAnimation=1;rounded=1;..."
- Always include
rounded=1;orthogonalLoop=1;jettySize=auto— these enable smart routing that avoids overlaps
- Pin
exitX/exitY/entryX/entryYon every edge when a node has 2+ connections — distributes lines across the shape perimeter
- Add
<Array as="points">waypoints when an edge must detour around an intermediate shape
- Leave room for arrowheads: the final straight segment between the last bend and the target shape must be ≥20px long. If too short, the arrowhead overlaps the bend and looks broken. Fix by increasing node spacing or adding explicit waypoints
Distributing connections on a shape
When multiple edges connect to the same shape, assign different entry/exit points to prevent stacking:
Position
exitX/entryX
exitY/entryY
Use when
Top center
0.5
0
connecting to node above
Top-left
0.25
0
2nd connection from top
Top-right
0.75
0
3rd connection from top
Right center
1
0.5
connecting to node on right
Bottom center
0.5
1
connecting to node below
Left center
0
0.5
connecting to node on left
Rule: if a shape has N connections on one side, space them evenly (e.g., 3 connections on bottom → exitX = 0.25, 0.5, 0.75)
Color palette (fillColor / strokeColor)
Used only when no preset is active (see "Applying a preset" above).
Color name
fillColor
strokeColor
Use for
Blue
#dae8fc
#6c8ebf
services, clients
Green
#d5e8d4
#82b366
success, databases
Yellow
#fff2cc
#d6b656
queues, decisions
Orange
#ffe6cc
#d79b00
gateways, APIs
Red/Pink
#f8cecc
#b85450
errors, alerts
Grey
#f5f5f5
#666666
external/neutral
Purple
#e1d5e7
#9673a6
security, auth
Layout tips
Spacing — scale with complexity:
Diagram complexity
Nodes
Horizontal gap
Vertical gap
Simple
≤5
200px
150px
Medium
6–10
280px
200px
Complex
>10
350px
250px
Routing corridors: between shape rows/columns, leave an extra ~80px empty corridor where edges can route without crossing shapes. Never place a shape in a gap that edges need to traverse.
Grid alignment: snap all x, y, width, height values to multiples of 10 — this ensures shapes align cleanly on draw.io's default grid and makes manual editing easier.
General rules:
- Plan a grid before assigning x/y coordinates — sketch node positions on paper/mentally first
- Group related nodes in the same horizontal or vertical band
- Use
swimlanecells for logical grouping with visible borders
- Place heavily-connected "hub" nodes centrally so edges radiate outward instead of crossing
- To force straight vertical connections, pin entry/exit points explicitly on edges:
exitX=0.5;exitY=1;exitDx=0;exitDy=0;entryX=0.5;entryY=0;entryDx=0;entryDy=0
- Always center-align a child node under its parent (same center x) to avoid diagonal routing
- Event bus pattern: place Kafka/bus nodes in the center of the service row, not below — services on either side can reach it with short horizontal arrows (
exitX=1left side,exitX=0right side), eliminating all line crossings
- Horizontal connections (
exitX=1orexitX=0) never cross vertical nodes in the same row; use them for peer-to-peer and publish connections
Avoiding edge-shape overlap:
- Before finalizing coordinates, trace each edge path mentally — if it must cross an unrelated shape, either move the shape or add waypoints
- For tree/hierarchical layouts: assign nodes to layers (rows), connect only between adjacent layers to minimize crossings
- For star/hub layouts: place the hub center, satellites around it — edges stay short and radial
- When an edge must span multiple rows/columns, route it along the outer corridor, not through the middle of the diagram
Export
Commands
There are two export modes:
- Preview / self-check (step 4 of the workflow) — no
-e. Outputdiagram.png. Required for vision self-check; using-ehere triggers a 400 "Could not process image" error from the vision API (issue #8).
- Final / deliverable (step 7) — pass
-e. Outputdiagram.drawio.png. The embedded XML keeps the file editable in draw.io.
# Preview PNG (use this in step 4, before self-check) — NO -e
draw.io -x -f png -s 2 -o diagram.png input.drawio
# Final PNG (step 7, after user approval) — WITH -e, double extension
draw.io -x -f png -e -s 2 -o diagram.drawio.png input.drawio
# macOS — full path (if not in PATH); preview / final variants
/Applications/draw.io.app/Contents/MacOS/draw.io -x -f png -s 2 -o diagram.png input.drawio
/Applications/draw.io.app/Contents/MacOS/draw.io -x -f png -e -s 2 -o diagram.drawio.png input.drawio
# Windows
"C:\Program Files\draw.io\draw.io.exe" -x -f png -e -s 2 -o diagram.drawio.png input.drawio
# Linux (headless — requires xvfb-run; on servers add HOME and --disable-gpu)
export HOME=${HOME:-/tmp}
xvfb-run -a --server-args="-screen 0 1280x1024x24" \
draw.io -x -f png -e -s 2 -o diagram.drawio.png input.drawio --disable-gpu
# Running as root (CI / Docker)? Append --no-sandbox AT THE END (placing it earlier makes drawio treat it as the input filename)
# SVG export (final — -e is safe; SVG is text)
draw.io -x -f svg -e -o diagram.svg input.drawio
# PDF export (final)
draw.io -x -f pdf -e -o diagram.pdf input.drawio
# Custom output directory (e.g. CI artifacts dir) — create if missing, then export there
mkdir -p ./artifacts && draw.io -x -f png -e -s 2 -o ./artifacts/diagram.drawio.png input.drawio
Post-export PNG repair (required after -e PNG export)
draw.io CLI truncates the IEND chunk when emitting -e PNGs — the file ends with the 4-byte IEND length field but the IEND type + CRC (8 bytes) are missing. Result: vision APIs return 400 "Could not process image" and strict PNG decoders error out. SVG/PDF are unaffected.
Run this immediately after every -e PNG export:
python3 <this-skill-dir>/scripts/repair_png.py diagram.drawio.png
The script's endswith(IEND) guard makes it a no-op once draw.io fixes the bug upstream — safe to run unconditionally.
Key flags:
-x— export mode (required)
-f— format:png,svg,pdf,jpg
-e— embed diagram XML in output (PNG, SVG, PDF) — exported file remains editable in draw.io. Skip for the preview PNG used in step 5 self-check —-ePNGs have a truncated IEND chunk that vision APIs reject (issue #8). For final PNG export, keep-eand runscripts/repair_png.py(see Post-export PNG repair). SVG/PDF unaffected.
-s— scale:1,2,3(2 recommended for PNG)
-o— output file path; accepts any directory (e.g../artifacts/diagram.drawio.png) —mkdir -pthe target dir first. Use.drawio.pngdouble extension when embedding.
-b— border width around diagram (default: 0, recommend 10)
-t— transparent background (PNG only)
--page-index 0— export specific page (default: all)
Browser fallback (no CLI needed)
When the draw.io desktop CLI is unavailable, generate a client-side viewer URL:
python3 <this-skill-dir>/scripts/encode_drawio_url.py input.drawio
Prints a https://viewer.diagrams.net/... URL with the diagram XML deflate-compressed and base64-encoded into the URL fragment. The fragment (after #) is never sent to the server, so nothing is uploaded — the diagram opens client-side for viewing and editing. Useful when the user cannot install the desktop app.
Fallback chain
When tools are unavailable, degrade gracefully:
Scenario
Behavior
draw.io CLI missing, Python available
Use browser fallback (diagrams.net URL)
draw.io CLI missing, Python missing
Generate .drawio XML only; instruct user to open in draw.io desktop or diagrams.net manually
draw.io CLI crashes / no output in macOS sandbox isolation
Treat CLI as unavailable in-sandbox; use browser fallback / XML-only; ask user to run CLI exports in a non-sandboxed host environment
Vision unavailable for self-check
Skip self-check (step 5); proceed directly to showing user the exported PNG
Export fails (Chromium/display issues)
On Linux, retry with xvfb-run -a; if still failing, deliver .drawio XML and suggest manual export
Export fails on Linux server (headless)
Try in order: (1) xvfb-run -a, (2) append --no-sandbox at the very end if root, (3) add --disable-gpu, (4) export HOME=/tmp, (5) install apt deps (libgtk-3-0 libnotify4 libnss3 libgbm1 libasound2t64 etc.), (6) fall back to tomkludy/drawio-renderer Docker (REST API for headless export)
Checking if draw.io is in PATH
# Try short command first
if command -v draw.io &>/dev/null; then
DRAWIO="draw.io"
elif [ -f "/Applications/draw.io.app/Contents/MacOS/draw.io" ]; then
DRAWIO="/Applications/draw.io.app/Contents/MacOS/draw.io"
else
echo "draw.io not found — install from https://github.com/jgraph/drawio-desktop/releases"
fi
Common Mistakes
When something looks wrong (export fails, vision rejects a PNG, layout broken, edges misroute), see references/troubleshooting.md for a row-by-row mistake → fix table.
Diagram Type Presets
When the user requests a specific diagram type, read references/diagram-types.md for the matching preset (shapes, edges, layout direction). Pick by user phrasing:
User says
Section in references/diagram-types.md
"ER diagram", "schema diagram", "data model"
ERD
"UML class diagram", "class diagram"
UML Class
"sequence diagram", "interaction diagram", "lifeline"
Sequence
"architecture", "system diagram", "service diagram"
Architecture
"neural network", "model architecture", "ML diagram", "deep learning"
ML / Deep Learning Model
"flowchart", "decision tree", "process flow"
Flowchart
The diagram-type preset sets structural style keywords. If a user style preset is also active (see ## Style Presets), keep the structural keywords and layer color/font/edge/extras on top — read references/style-presets.md → "Interaction with diagram-type presets" for the merge rules.