Generates a full dedicated Docusaurus page for every one of the 132 skills
(73 bundled + 59 optional) under website/docs/user-guide/skills/{bundled,optional}/<category>/.
Each page carries the skill's description, metadata (version, author, license,
dependencies, platform gating, tags, related skills cross-linked to their own
pages), and the complete SKILL.md body that Hermes loads at runtime.
Previously the two catalog pages just listed skills with a one-line blurb and
no way to see what the skill actually did — users had to go read the source
repo. Now every skill has a browsable, searchable, cross-linked reference in
the docs.
- website/scripts/generate-skill-docs.py — generator that reads skills/ and
optional-skills/, writes per-skill pages, regenerates both catalog indexes,
and rewrites the Skills section of sidebars.ts. Handles MDX escaping
(outside fenced code blocks: curly braces, unsafe HTML-ish tags) and
rewrites relative references/*.md links to point at the GitHub source.
- website/docs/reference/skills-catalog.md — regenerated; each row links to
the new dedicated page.
- website/docs/reference/optional-skills-catalog.md — same.
- website/sidebars.ts — Skills section now has Bundled / Optional subtrees
with one nested category per skill folder.
- .github/workflows/{docs-site-checks,deploy-site}.yml — run the generator
before docusaurus build so CI stays in sync with the source SKILL.md files.
Build verified locally with `npx docusaurus build`. Only remaining warnings
are pre-existing broken link/anchor issues in unrelated pages.
18 KiB
| title | sidebar_label | description |
|---|---|---|
| Concept Diagrams | Concept Diagrams | Generate flat, minimal light/dark-aware SVG diagrams as standalone HTML files, using a unified educational visual language with 9 semantic color ramps, sente... |
{/* This page is auto-generated from the skill's SKILL.md by website/scripts/generate-skill-docs.py. Edit the source SKILL.md, not this page. */}
Concept Diagrams
Generate flat, minimal light/dark-aware SVG diagrams as standalone HTML files, using a unified educational visual language with 9 semantic color ramps, sentence-case typography, and automatic dark mode. Best suited for educational and non-software visuals — physics setups, chemistry mechanisms, math curves, physical objects (aircraft, turbines, smartphones, mechanical watches), anatomy, floor plans, cross-sections, narrative journeys (lifecycle of X, process of Y), hub-spoke system integrations (smart city, IoT), and exploded layer views. If a more specialized skill exists for the subject (dedicated software/cloud architecture, hand-drawn sketches, animated explainers, etc.), prefer that — otherwise this skill can also serve as a general-purpose SVG diagram fallback with a clean educational look. Ships with 15 example diagrams.
Skill metadata
| Source | Optional — install with hermes skills install official/creative/concept-diagrams |
| Path | optional-skills/creative/concept-diagrams |
| Version | 0.1.0 |
| Author | v1k22 (original PR), ported into hermes-agent |
| License | MIT |
| Tags | diagrams, svg, visualization, education, physics, chemistry, engineering |
| Related skills | architecture-diagram, excalidraw, generative-widgets |
Reference: full SKILL.md
:::info The following is the complete skill definition that Hermes loads when this skill is triggered. This is what the agent sees as instructions when the skill is active. :::
Concept Diagrams
Generate production-quality SVG diagrams with a unified flat, minimal design system. Output is a single self-contained HTML file that renders identically in any modern browser, with automatic light/dark mode.
Scope
Best suited for:
- Physics setups, chemistry mechanisms, math curves, biology
- Physical objects (aircraft, turbines, smartphones, mechanical watches, cells)
- Anatomy, cross-sections, exploded layer views
- Floor plans, architectural conversions
- Narrative journeys (lifecycle of X, process of Y)
- Hub-spoke system integrations (smart city, IoT networks, electricity grids)
- Educational / textbook-style visuals in any domain
- Quantitative charts (grouped bars, energy profiles)
Look elsewhere first for:
- Dedicated software / cloud infrastructure architecture with a dark tech aesthetic (consider
architecture-diagramif available) - Hand-drawn whiteboard sketches (consider
excalidrawif available) - Animated explainers or video output (consider an animation skill)
If a more specialized skill is available for the subject, prefer that. If none fits, this skill can serve as a general-purpose SVG diagram fallback — the output will carry the clean educational aesthetic described below, which is a reasonable default for almost any subject.
Workflow
- Decide on the diagram type (see Diagram Types below).
- Lay out components using the Design System rules.
- Write the full HTML page using
templates/template.htmlas the wrapper — paste your SVG where the template says<!-- PASTE SVG HERE -->. - Save as a standalone
.htmlfile (for example~/my-diagram.htmlor./my-diagram.html). - User opens it directly in a browser — no server, no dependencies.
Optional: if the user wants a browsable gallery of multiple diagrams, see "Local Preview Server" at the bottom.
Load the HTML template:
skill_view(name="concept-diagrams", file_path="templates/template.html")
The template embeds the full CSS design system (c-* color classes, text classes, light/dark variables, arrow marker styles). The SVG you generate relies on these classes being present on the hosting page.
Design System
Philosophy
- Flat: no gradients, drop shadows, blur, glow, or neon effects.
- Minimal: show the essential. No decorative icons inside boxes.
- Consistent: same colors, spacing, typography, and stroke widths across every diagram.
- Dark-mode ready: all colors auto-adapt via CSS classes — no per-mode SVG.
Color Palette
9 color ramps, each with 7 stops. Put the class name on a <g> or shape element; the template CSS handles both modes.
| Class | 50 (lightest) | 100 | 200 | 400 | 600 | 800 | 900 (darkest) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
c-purple |
#EEEDFE | #CECBF6 | #AFA9EC | #7F77DD | #534AB7 | #3C3489 | #26215C |
c-teal |
#E1F5EE | #9FE1CB | #5DCAA5 | #1D9E75 | #0F6E56 | #085041 | #04342C |
c-coral |
#FAECE7 | #F5C4B3 | #F0997B | #D85A30 | #993C1D | #712B13 | #4A1B0C |
c-pink |
#FBEAF0 | #F4C0D1 | #ED93B1 | #D4537E | #993556 | #72243E | #4B1528 |
c-gray |
#F1EFE8 | #D3D1C7 | #B4B2A9 | #888780 | #5F5E5A | #444441 | #2C2C2A |
c-blue |
#E6F1FB | #B5D4F4 | #85B7EB | #378ADD | #185FA5 | #0C447C | #042C53 |
c-green |
#EAF3DE | #C0DD97 | #97C459 | #639922 | #3B6D11 | #27500A | #173404 |
c-amber |
#FAEEDA | #FAC775 | #EF9F27 | #BA7517 | #854F0B | #633806 | #412402 |
c-red |
#FCEBEB | #F7C1C1 | #F09595 | #E24B4A | #A32D2D | #791F1F | #501313 |
Color Assignment Rules
Color encodes meaning, not sequence. Never cycle through colors like a rainbow.
- Group nodes by category — all nodes of the same type share one color.
- Use
c-grayfor neutral/structural nodes (start, end, generic steps, users). - Use 2-3 colors per diagram, not 6+.
- Prefer
c-purple,c-teal,c-coral,c-pinkfor general categories. - Reserve
c-blue,c-green,c-amber,c-redfor semantic meaning (info, success, warning, error).
Light/dark stop mapping (handled by the template CSS — just use the class):
- Light mode: 50 fill + 600 stroke + 800 title / 600 subtitle
- Dark mode: 800 fill + 200 stroke + 100 title / 200 subtitle
Typography
Only two font sizes. No exceptions.
| Class | Size | Weight | Use |
|---|---|---|---|
th |
14px | 500 | Node titles, region labels |
ts |
12px | 400 | Subtitles, descriptions, arrow labels |
t |
14px | 400 | General text |
- Sentence case always. Never Title Case, never ALL CAPS.
- Every
<text>MUST carry a class (t,ts, orth). No unclassed text. dominant-baseline="central"on all text inside boxes.text-anchor="middle"for centered text in boxes.
Width estimation (approx):
- 14px weight 500: ~8px per character
- 12px weight 400: ~6.5px per character
- Always verify:
box_width >= (char_count × px_per_char) + 48(24px padding each side)
Spacing & Layout
- ViewBox:
viewBox="0 0 680 H"where H = content height + 40px buffer. - Safe area: x=40 to x=640, y=40 to y=(H-40).
- Between boxes: 60px minimum gap.
- Inside boxes: 24px horizontal padding, 12px vertical padding.
- Arrowhead gap: 10px between arrowhead and box edge.
- Single-line box: 44px height.
- Two-line box: 56px height, 18px between title and subtitle baselines.
- Container padding: 20px minimum inside every container.
- Max nesting: 2-3 levels deep. Deeper gets unreadable at 680px width.
Stroke & Shape
- Stroke width: 0.5px on all node borders. Not 1px, not 2px.
- Rect rounding:
rx="8"for nodes,rx="12"for inner containers,rx="16"torx="20"for outer containers. - Connector paths: MUST have
fill="none". SVG defaults tofill: blackotherwise.
Arrow Marker
Include this <defs> block at the start of every SVG:
<defs>
<marker id="arrow" viewBox="0 0 10 10" refX="8" refY="5"
markerWidth="6" markerHeight="6" orient="auto-start-reverse">
<path d="M2 1L8 5L2 9" fill="none" stroke="context-stroke"
stroke-width="1.5" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round"/>
</marker>
</defs>
Use marker-end="url(#arrow)" on lines. The arrowhead inherits the line color via context-stroke.
CSS Classes (Provided by the Template)
The template page provides:
- Text:
.t,.ts,.th - Neutral:
.box,.arr,.leader,.node - Color ramps:
.c-purple,.c-teal,.c-coral,.c-pink,.c-gray,.c-blue,.c-green,.c-amber,.c-red(all with automatic light/dark mode)
You do not need to redefine these — just apply them in your SVG. The template file contains the full CSS definitions.
SVG Boilerplate
Every SVG inside the template page starts with this exact structure:
<svg width="100%" viewBox="0 0 680 {HEIGHT}" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
<defs>
<marker id="arrow" viewBox="0 0 10 10" refX="8" refY="5"
markerWidth="6" markerHeight="6" orient="auto-start-reverse">
<path d="M2 1L8 5L2 9" fill="none" stroke="context-stroke"
stroke-width="1.5" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round"/>
</marker>
</defs>
<!-- Diagram content here -->
</svg>
Replace {HEIGHT} with the actual computed height (last element bottom + 40px).
Node Patterns
Single-line node (44px):
<g class="node c-blue">
<rect x="100" y="20" width="180" height="44" rx="8" stroke-width="0.5"/>
<text class="th" x="190" y="42" text-anchor="middle" dominant-baseline="central">Service name</text>
</g>
Two-line node (56px):
<g class="node c-teal">
<rect x="100" y="20" width="200" height="56" rx="8" stroke-width="0.5"/>
<text class="th" x="200" y="38" text-anchor="middle" dominant-baseline="central">Service name</text>
<text class="ts" x="200" y="56" text-anchor="middle" dominant-baseline="central">Short description</text>
</g>
Connector (no label):
<line x1="200" y1="76" x2="200" y2="120" class="arr" marker-end="url(#arrow)"/>
Container (dashed or solid):
<g class="c-purple">
<rect x="40" y="92" width="600" height="300" rx="16" stroke-width="0.5"/>
<text class="th" x="66" y="116">Container label</text>
<text class="ts" x="66" y="134">Subtitle info</text>
</g>
Diagram Types
Choose the layout that fits the subject:
- Flowchart — CI/CD pipelines, request lifecycles, approval workflows, data processing. Single-direction flow (top-down or left-right). Max 4-5 nodes per row.
- Structural / Containment — Cloud infrastructure nesting, system architecture with layers. Large outer containers with inner regions. Dashed rects for logical groupings.
- API / Endpoint Map — REST routes, GraphQL schemas. Tree from root, branching to resource groups, each containing endpoint nodes.
- Microservice Topology — Service mesh, event-driven systems. Services as nodes, arrows for communication patterns, message queues between.
- Data Flow — ETL pipelines, streaming architectures. Left-to-right flow from sources through processing to sinks.
- Physical / Structural — Vehicles, buildings, hardware, anatomy. Use shapes that match the physical form —
<path>for curved bodies,<polygon>for tapered shapes,<ellipse>/<circle>for cylindrical parts, nested<rect>for compartments. Seereferences/physical-shape-cookbook.md. - Infrastructure / Systems Integration — Smart cities, IoT networks, multi-domain systems. Hub-spoke layout with central platform connecting subsystems. Semantic line styles (
.data-line,.power-line,.water-pipe,.road). Seereferences/infrastructure-patterns.md. - UI / Dashboard Mockups — Admin panels, monitoring dashboards. Screen frame with nested chart/gauge/indicator elements. See
references/dashboard-patterns.md.
For physical, infrastructure, and dashboard diagrams, load the matching reference file before generating — each one provides ready-made CSS classes and shape primitives.
Validation Checklist
Before finalizing any SVG, verify ALL of the following:
- Every
<text>has classt,ts, orth. - Every
<text>inside a box hasdominant-baseline="central". - Every connector
<path>or<line>used as arrow hasfill="none". - No arrow line crosses through an unrelated box.
box_width >= (longest_label_chars × 8) + 48for 14px text.box_width >= (longest_label_chars × 6.5) + 48for 12px text.- ViewBox height = bottom-most element + 40px.
- All content stays within x=40 to x=640.
- Color classes (
c-*) are on<g>or shape elements, never on<path>connectors. - Arrow
<defs>block is present. - No gradients, shadows, blur, or glow effects.
- Stroke width is 0.5px on all node borders.
Output & Preview
Default: standalone HTML file
Write a single .html file the user can open directly. No server, no dependencies, works offline. Pattern:
# 1. Load the template
template = skill_view("concept-diagrams", "templates/template.html")
# 2. Fill in title, subtitle, and paste your SVG
html = template.replace(
"<!-- DIAGRAM TITLE HERE -->", "SN2 reaction mechanism"
).replace(
"<!-- OPTIONAL SUBTITLE HERE -->", "Bimolecular nucleophilic substitution"
).replace(
"<!-- PASTE SVG HERE -->", svg_content
)
# 3. Write to a user-chosen path (or ./ by default)
write_file("./sn2-mechanism.html", html)
Tell the user how to open it:
# macOS
open ./sn2-mechanism.html
# Linux
xdg-open ./sn2-mechanism.html
Optional: local preview server (multi-diagram gallery)
Only use this when the user explicitly wants a browsable gallery of multiple diagrams.
Rules:
- Bind to
127.0.0.1only. Never0.0.0.0. Exposing diagrams on all network interfaces is a security hazard on shared networks. - Pick a free port (do NOT hard-code one) and tell the user the chosen URL.
- The server is optional and opt-in — prefer the standalone HTML file first.
Recommended pattern (lets the OS pick a free ephemeral port):
# Put each diagram in its own folder under .diagrams/
mkdir -p .diagrams/sn2-mechanism
# ...write .diagrams/sn2-mechanism/index.html...
# Serve on loopback only, free port
cd .diagrams && python3 -c "
import http.server, socketserver
with socketserver.TCPServer(('127.0.0.1', 0), http.server.SimpleHTTPRequestHandler) as s:
print(f'Serving at http://127.0.0.1:{s.server_address[1]}/')
s.serve_forever()
" &
If the user insists on a fixed port, use 127.0.0.1:<port> — still never 0.0.0.0. Document how to stop the server (kill %1 or pkill -f "http.server").
Examples Reference
The examples/ directory ships 15 complete, tested diagrams. Browse them for working patterns before writing a new diagram of a similar type:
| File | Type | Demonstrates |
|---|---|---|
hospital-emergency-department-flow.md |
Flowchart | Priority routing with semantic colors |
feature-film-production-pipeline.md |
Flowchart | Phased workflow, horizontal sub-flows |
automated-password-reset-flow.md |
Flowchart | Auth flow with error branches |
autonomous-llm-research-agent-flow.md |
Flowchart | Loop-back arrows, decision branches |
place-order-uml-sequence.md |
Sequence | UML sequence diagram style |
commercial-aircraft-structure.md |
Physical | Paths, polygons, ellipses for realistic shapes |
wind-turbine-structure.md |
Physical cross-section | Underground/above-ground separation, color coding |
smartphone-layer-anatomy.md |
Exploded view | Alternating left/right labels, layered components |
apartment-floor-plan-conversion.md |
Floor plan | Walls, doors, proposed changes in dotted red |
banana-journey-tree-to-smoothie.md |
Narrative journey | Winding path, progressive state changes |
cpu-ooo-microarchitecture.md |
Hardware pipeline | Fan-out, memory hierarchy sidebar |
sn2-reaction-mechanism.md |
Chemistry | Molecules, curved arrows, energy profile |
smart-city-infrastructure.md |
Hub-spoke | Semantic line styles per system |
electricity-grid-flow.md |
Multi-stage flow | Voltage hierarchy, flow markers |
ml-benchmark-grouped-bar-chart.md |
Chart | Grouped bars, dual axis |
Load any example with:
skill_view(name="concept-diagrams", file_path="examples/<filename>")
Quick Reference: What to Use When
| User says | Diagram type | Suggested colors |
|---|---|---|
| "show the pipeline" | Flowchart | gray start/end, purple steps, red errors, teal deploy |
| "draw the data flow" | Data pipeline (left-right) | gray sources, purple processing, teal sinks |
| "visualize the system" | Structural (containment) | purple container, teal services, coral data |
| "map the endpoints" | API tree | purple root, one ramp per resource group |
| "show the services" | Microservice topology | gray ingress, teal services, purple bus, coral workers |
| "draw the aircraft/vehicle" | Physical | paths, polygons, ellipses for realistic shapes |
| "smart city / IoT" | Hub-spoke integration | semantic line styles per subsystem |
| "show the dashboard" | UI mockup | dark screen, chart colors: teal, purple, coral for alerts |
| "power grid / electricity" | Multi-stage flow | voltage hierarchy (HV/MV/LV line weights) |
| "wind turbine / turbine" | Physical cross-section | foundation + tower cutaway + nacelle color-coded |
| "journey of X / lifecycle" | Narrative journey | winding path, progressive state changes |
| "layers of X / exploded" | Exploded layer view | vertical stack, alternating labels |
| "CPU / pipeline" | Hardware pipeline | vertical stages, fan-out to execution ports |
| "floor plan / apartment" | Floor plan | walls, doors, proposed changes in dotted red |
| "reaction mechanism" | Chemistry | atoms, bonds, curved arrows, transition state, energy profile |