I use excalidraw to manage my diagrams for my blog

59 pointsposted 3 hours ago
by mlysk

24 Comments

lnenad

an hour ago

I love diagramming, but I genuinely don't understand how people can use these wonky looking tools. It looks off, I had to make my own[1] to create something that's easy to use and looks good/normal.

[1] https://grafly.io

emaro

9 minutes ago

I like the wonky, hand-drawn looking style. I think it fits well beause usually if I use a diagram it's not 100% precise and accurate, but more a high-level illustration. The wonky style conveys the approximate precision of the presented concept.

Also, and that's personal, I think it's cute.

superkai

42 minutes ago

looks awesome man !

Jnr

an hour ago

Cool, I did a similar thing last week.

I made a custom Payload CMS block that allows to create and update excalidraw diagrams within the CMS. It supports dark and light mode switching and rendering inline or as external SVG.

And last weekend I added MCP server with Oauth so I could generate and update those diagrams and add them to post drafts from Claude. I think it is more convenient since I don't have to use API billing model and don't need to build a custom UI.

Here is an example post: https://www.janhouse.lv/blog/network/self-hosting-tailscale-...

Originally I wanted to sync posts from Obsidian but it doesn't have good enough image handling which I sometimes need and I needed extra metadata to unlist or password protect or noindex some posts.

walthamstow

2 hours ago

Excalidraw has proliferated quite widely in my company since we got Claude Code. Its a shame the default font is ugly, childish and inaccessible.

darshanmakwana

2 hours ago

I simply just draw in excalidraw and take a ss and past it in my obsidian note, I have a setup that automatically parses posts from my vault and then pushes them to my site

wdroz

2 hours ago

You can also bootstrap your initial schema with LLMs with the excalidraw MCP "app" [0]. But MCP "apps"[1] are quite new and not very well supported yet.

[0] -- https://github.com/excalidraw/excalidraw-mcp

[1] -- https://modelcontextprotocol.io/extensions/apps/overview

mi_lk

2 hours ago

I didn't have good experience with excalidraw-mcp when it first came out a month ago; the Claude-generated diagrams were too raw/unpolished. I'm sticking to mermaid for now but I'm interested in hearing how people make exclidraw-mcp work for them

dewey

2 hours ago

Everyone does that these days and they are becoming AI tells like the em-dash or the blue-glow of the early AI generated images that everyone added to their blog posts.

gethly

3 hours ago

Same. I started using it for Gethly blog. It's not perfect, some things make me crazy but overall it is better than draw.io that I used to use before. Excalidraw also has these great styles that just feel right :)

emil-lp

3 hours ago

Should be Show HN.

Now it reads like an ad for some extension to a program I've never heard about.

emil-lp

3 hours ago

Apparently Excalidraw is An open source virtual hand-drawn style whiteboard. Collaborative and end-to-end encrypted.

https://github.com/excalidraw/excalidraw

petepete

2 hours ago

I use Excalidraw extensively at work. For me, it's really close to perfection.

It has an excellent UI, selections work way better than Lucid or Figma etc, the sketchy look makes it clear designs are rough and not blueprints, it's private and loads instantly.

The one negative is that it's a pain to get the multiplayer self-hosted version running.

fabbbbb

2 hours ago

I was surprised about that, too. Tried a bit but found very few sources online.

A self-hosted version with storage (multiplayer) plus any Claude access would be a killer setup for team planning etc and let us drop Miro.

bryanhogan

2 hours ago

Both Excalidraw and TLDraw are the two most popular apps of their kind, simplistic whiteboard tools, so I don't think it's that surprising and I don't see any reason why this post should be a "Show HN".

TLDraw: https://www.tldraw.com/

Excalidraw: https://excalidraw.com/

jruohonen

2 hours ago

For me, draw.io is still the winner, and especially now that it runs locally also on Linux. As for works in progress, I hope this one succeeds (and would also run locally at some point):

TikzMaker: https://tikzmaker.com/

postatic

2 hours ago

I love excalidraw, but don't need the excalidraw+. But Excalidraw open source is the frontend only, which means I have to delete my drawings each time. So I built the backend so I can create many canvases.

https://drawx.ossy.dev

jstanley

2 hours ago

Your site makes me make an account before I can use it, whereas excalidraw.com doesn't, and also excalidraw.com seems to save my drawing just fine? I closed a tab and reopened it and my drawing was still there, presumably from localStorage.

The three-lines-menu also has a "Save to..." option that lets you create a sharable link or save to your local disk.

blahlabs

2 hours ago

You can also embed the excalidraw drawing in the exported image. So you can drag/drop the exorted image back into excalidraw and edit it later.