UML Editor/Designer on *nix - Programming On Unix
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UML Editor/Designer on *nix
Hello fellow Unixer, This thread is about a must have software engineer tool called an UML(Unified Modeling Language) designer. More precisely, it's about finding the open source UML Editor/Designer that you need. I've been doing a lot of UML editing and design patterns lately. It is a must for software engineers and developpers to know how to design and understand UML. With my current workflow I had to switch from UML designing on paper to UML designing on the computer. And thus the unevitable question came to my mind: "What editor are available and which one should I choose?". I didn't find any useful comparison online, all of that I found was people praising their own tool for their own benifits. What I was looking for was something simple without too much dependencies, simple as in that only knowing UML I could simply put what was in my mind directly in the software, and something that could construct a UML from some source files. From a lot of searches, downloads, trials, and errors, I present my software review. gaphor - An easy to use modeling environment for UML design I was directly shocked by its simplicity it made the work so much easier. It also let you save/export the project as an image which is useful. The only drawbacks are that it doesn't look good, or hides parts of the GUI, if you use a dark gtk2 theme, and that the class boxes don't let you add attributes nor methods. It's also missing the composition relation. The binary of Gaphor is around 23MB with some python libraries dependencies on the side. kdesdk-umbrello - UML Modeller I had to pull around 70MB of package that weren't related to the software to get umbrello installed. ...and finally the program was installed. BUT, umbrello wouldn't want to start, I was getting the following error: Code: umbrello(11497)/kdeui (kdelibs): Attempt to use QAction "edit_undo" with KXMLGUIFactory! pretty impressive. It has all the features needed, all the UML schema (from use case to class diagram), and you can export/import class diagrams in multiple languages. umleditor - UML/INTERLIS-Editor Umleditor was very light, around 7MB. When starting it I was presented with a cheap splash screen and then a white window popped-up. The interface of umleditor is not friendly at all, I couldn't even figure out how to create a class. The buttons icons don't even have text equivalent so it got me completely lost. umlet - Free UML Tool for Fast UML Diagrams (stand-alone version) Umlet is also, like umleditor, very light (around 6MB). The idea with umlet is that you have all the available elements on the top-right corner and you drag them in the empty window on the left. You can't directly edit the class attributes you have to change the properties in the bottom-right box which can get very annoying. z3bra Wrote:My tool of choice is UMLet, I have used it for a whole year now, and I must say that it works perfectly ! bouml - A free UML 2 modeler with C++, Idl, Java, PHP and Python code generation It turned out that bouml isn't free: Quote:You don't have a licence, closing this message box a file dialog will appear proposing you to save a 'licence request file', please refer to http://www.bouml.fr/pricing.html to know how to use it to get a license violet - A UML editor for quickly producing simple UML diagrams (also an Eclipse plugin) Violet has a prety interface but the controls are sluggish. I tried dragging the elements in vain. argouml - A UML design tool with cognitive support This thing was huge (60MB) and also greeted me with a blank window. tinyuml - A tool for creation of UML 2 diagrams with a focus on easy use and a small & stable feature set It has everything needed to do a complete class diagram, but it has only that and nothing else. It can export the project as an image. Let's note that the GUI is a pain to use. astah_community - Lightweight, easy-to-use, and free UML2.x modeler It also isn't opensource but still has some free features. modelio-open - Modelio is an Open Source UML tool developed by Modeliosoft. It supports the UML2 and BPMN2 standards. This program is 200MB so I didn't bother downloading it. qtumleditor - Qt5 UML Editor is a MOF/UML editor based on QtMof Qt5 add-on I wasn't even able to install this UML editor. astade - A UML tool for the complete C or C++ development process I couldn't even understand how to use this software. Web-Based UML Designer Web-based UML designer aren't the best thing in the world. First of all, none, or most of them aren't open source. Most of the ones I found were slow or didn't work correctly. The main reason someone might want to use one of those might be for collaboration. If you want to try some here's a list with review:
Moral of the story I spent all day installing one after the other all the UML editors I could find in the Arch repo and in the end almost none of them were satisfying or even working as expected. Only two of them caught my attention: gaphor, which worked perfectly although missing some features, and tinyuml, which is extremely small and has all I need for class diagrams. I'll personally stick with gaphor. What do you think UH? Share your experience with UML editors on *nix. |
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wth, this is actually a thing. I usually do this kind of stuff on my whiteboard, didn't know there were actual developer tools for it or that it was even called something. Thanks a lot venam.
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(08-01-2014, 06:23 PM)Ippytraxx Wrote: wth, this is actually a thing. I usually do this kind of stuff on my whiteboard, didn't know there were actual developer tools for it or that it was even called something. Thanks a lot venam. Well, I was searching for something even more advanced. A program that would generate the UML from the source code (reverse engineering) or even generate the source code template from a UML design. But it goes further than the simple UML designer, it's called a CASE tool. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Computer-a...ngineering |
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My tool of choice is UMLet, I have used it for a whole year now, and I must say that it works perfectly !
The best points are CLI conversion of UMLet files (.uxf) to other format (.pdf, .jpg, .eps). I use it via a Makefile to integrate diagrams in my LaTeX documents, that awesome : Code: uxf.eps: The `problem' is that it's developped in Java, so you have some dependencies that come along.. Also, thanks for this thread venam, I never heard of gaphor, which looks nice ! |
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The one I really wanted to use was Umbrello, I was expecting it to best the best of between them considering it's KDE and it's suppose to be very user friendly. But it didn't worked on my machine.
Z3bra, can you include a screenshot of UMLet. |
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I'm somewhat like Ippy. I usually do this in my head, but when it's starting to get too convoluted, I'll just use good old pen and paper. For me that's still a faster way to create diagrams and charts than trying to use software.
Still, thanks for the overview, I might change my mind about this someday. -----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK----- Version: 3.1 GCA/IT d-(---)@ s+: a-- C+++(++++)$ UBL*+++ P+++>++++ L++ E W+++$ !N !o K !w !O M+>++ !V PS+++ PE !Y PGP+ !t-- !5 !X R@ tv- b+ DI D+ G e h r++ y+ ------END GEEK CODE BLOCK------ |
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This is a really useful post, thanks a lot!
Thought I'd chip in on gliffy, as that's basically what I've been using and I hate it. The interface is pretty slow and really buggy (accidently made a mistake on a textbox? Trying to edit it crashes everything!). And of course you can't save anything without paying up (or at least making an account). It's good enough for small quick stuff. I think I used creately once and it seemed fine enough. |
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(09-01-2014, 07:54 PM)kirby Wrote: This is a really useful post, thanks a lot! Thanks for sharing your experience about those ones. I'll update the thread with the opinions about softwares I couldn't install. |
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I've stumbled upon those reviews: http://judebert.com/progress/plugin/tag/uml. It might be interesting to read as he also had a terrible time with UML editors on *nix.
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Hi Venam,
We are developing an UML modeling tool called GenMyModel (http://www.genmymodel.com). It is web based and thus is OS independent. We are trying to make it as simple and as powerful as possible. I hope it can be suitable for you. Any feedback is very welcome. |
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(01-02-2014, 04:12 AM)xaelis Wrote: Hi Venam, I've updated my reviews of web-based UML editors. I'd say I'm very impressed by GenMyModel. Thanks for sharing this amazing tool for free. |
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I recently got into this whole UML thing just to try it out. I'm using Dia, which I really like because it also has flowchart objects as well as your standard UML ones.
It doesn't seem to be on your list so give it a try. |
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I updated this thread. Z3bra and I resolved the problem with java GUI blank window. It was related to the non-reparenting wm.
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