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I am looking for a UML design tool (just for design, no need for code generation).

Key features

  1. Free
  2. For Linux
  3. Easy to use
  4. Lightweight
3
  • While not strictly for UML I use JavE. Since all the drawings are plain text I can paste them into my wiki, markdown files in VCS etc. and easily modify and see changes between revisions. It's easy to use but you get no shapes out of the box. You can export and save your own, though. Example diagram. Jun 6, 2016 at 6:56
  • 1
    If you want a tool to please your boss, but don't want to spend much time on diagramming. Or you want to visualise your code. Then checkout Doxygen. It reads code and generates diagrams. We first used it to get our boss off of our back, he wanted everything documented (but documents get out of date). Later I used it sometimes, to visualise the code that we had. It is good to get an overview. It does not do all UML diagrams. But what it does do is automated. The few other diagrams that we made, we did by hand, on a white board, and made a photograph. May 8, 2018 at 11:08
  • I tried doxygen, graphviz following how-to-use-doxygen-to-create-uml-class-diagrams-from-c-source
    – Nick Dong
    Aug 24, 2021 at 14:34

8 Answers 8

82

Most of the UML tools for Linux look really bad, but you could use these:

Experimental/alternatives:

  • ASCII flow - you can not always include images in documentation but simple text looks everywhere same, good to use in code for quick overview.

  • Cloudcraft - Draw AWS diagrams with Cloudcraft. Good for quick architecture diagrams.

For quick drawings and who does not scare to "code" some diagrams I also suggest to take look at this product http://yuml.me/diagram/scruffy/class/samples.

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  • 3
    I am using ArgoUML for now. But it is a big pain in the backside. Very limited support for UML models and connectors. Something is better than nothing.
    – Kamal
    Feb 14, 2012 at 5:11
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    It is Umbrello not Umbrella (for those doing a search in a package manager.)
    – Cory-G
    Aug 18, 2014 at 20:38
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    The problem is that most of these tools are dead. Alone Dia (which I really like) hasn't seen an update for over 6 years. Feb 21, 2017 at 8:37
  • @rbaleksandar I have to agree with you, but the processes/diagrams haven't "much" changed. With the adoption of agile frameworks, I see less and less heavy documented projects with UML diagrams etc. This doesn't mean the documentation is less important it still should be part of the process. Feb 21, 2017 at 9:02
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    Of course I'm only referring to the dead tools. Umbrello for example seems to still be alive though it requires loads of KDE packages and if you are not using KDE...well... :D Feb 21, 2017 at 9:17
12

i like UMLet: http://www.umlet.com/. It's very light weight

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  • Its very hard to use! Even dragging a box is a pain. Am i missing something? Can you maybe share an ease-of-use guide Sep 11, 2020 at 5:08
9

Did you mean a tool to draw the diagram? Try Dia Diagram Editor.

8

I just discovered Violet UML. Easy to use, lightweight, diagrams look ok for me: I picked it for my use!

See here : http://alexdp.free.fr/violetumleditor/page.php

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I use gaphor which is GTK2 based and draws nice diagrams using cairo. It's Python based and can analyze and display Python code in UML.

Best install from PyPI: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/gaphor

Github: https://github.com/gaphor/gaphor

Website: https://gaphor.org/

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You can find a metalist of lists of UML open source tools here: http://modeling-languages.com/uml-tools/#open

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I use the Obeo UML Designer that you can find in the Eclipse Marketplace.

It goes very well together with the Acceleo toolkit for MDSD.

I think the major selling point for any modeling tool is that it has to be able to produce an output that can be fed into your toolchain.

I have never seen models that just exist for pure documentary purposes survive more than two or three cycles in a project. That sort of stuff usually never works, because the changes in the project are executed first and then the model is adapted. This kind of work is rightfully regarded as either braindead or luxury (depending on who you ask).

The correct way is that changes in the project must be driven by changes in the model.

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I liked BOUML but now the free version is no longer available... there is a fork named DOUML, check it out

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