Here are a list of featured diagrams, showing the kind of things you can do with GitUML.
Java
Java programmers traditionally love UML diagrams. Java support includes visualising packages!
It is astounding how much more sense you can make out of your source code when visualised in this way.
Here are a variety of diagrams extracted from various GitHub repositories, including an analysis of the startup of plantuml.jar from the
PlantUML project,
a diagram from the nice
Java Design Patterns
GitHub repository and some visualisations of the
openjdk-jfx
repository.
Remember, you can duplicate diagrams into your own account, by clicking on the duplicate link underneath any diagram's thumbnail.
Then you change which files are being visualised. Explore!
Description:
I use this source code as a torture test example for implementing java-nested
package visualisation.
I (the author of GitUML) also recently added optimisations so that nest
packages with no classes would collapse into **a.b.c** etc. syntax rather than
showing one nest…
Java programmers traditionally love UML diagrams. Java support includes visualising packages! It is astounding how much more sense you can make out of your source code when visualised in this way.
Here are a variety of diagrams extracted from various GitHub repositories, including an analysis of the startup of
plantuml.jar
from the PlantUML project, a diagram from the nice Java Design Patterns GitHub repository and some visualisations of the openjdk-jfx repository.Remember, you can duplicate diagrams into your own account, by clicking on the duplicate link underneath any diagram's thumbnail. Then you change which files are being visualised. Explore!