A rushed release goes live with a “quick” diagram. Symbols are improvised, lanes are uneven, and the export is a fuzzy PNG. Support misreads a handoff, engineering debates message timing, and the doc set drifts. One confusing picture multiplies meetings and mistakes. If that feels familiar, this course is for you. In this course, you will explore industry standards and editorial habits that make diagrams useful, consistent, and easy to maintain. Using draw.io as the primary demo tool and Mermaid for “diagrams-as-code” inside repos and pull requests, you’ll choose the right notation for the job (BPMN for processes, UML for structure and behavior), enforce a house style for clarity, apply canonical symbols and layouts, and improve readability with accessible labeling, legends, and captions. You’ll also practice publication workflows: selecting file formats, naming and versioning exports, adding cross-references, and—when using Mermaid—keeping text sources reviewable, diff-friendly, and CI-rendered so images always match the docs.

Technical Publication - Diagramming Standards

Technical Publication - Diagramming Standards


Instructors: Starweaver
Access provided by Masterflex LLC, Part of Avantor
Recommended experience
What you'll learn
Assess the appropriate diagramming notation for a given technical scenario.
Establish consistency and clarity through appropriate technical conventions in a reusable team style guide.
Apply canonical symbols and layouts for publication-ready documentation with versioning.
Skills you'll gain
- Web Content Accessibility Guidelines
- Technical Drawing
- Image Quality
- Diagram Design
- File Management
- Technical Documentation
- Style Guides
- Data Flow Diagrams (DFDs)
- Software Versioning
- Software Design Documents
- Graphic and Visual Design
- Technical Communication
- Document Management
- Version Control
- Typography
- Unified Modeling Language
Details to know

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1 assignment
December 2025
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There are 3 modules in this course
This module teaches how to match a documentation question to the right notation so readers get answers fast. You will learn a clear decision rubric for when to use BPMN for processes and when to use UML Use Case, Sequence, or State for structure, interactions, and lifecycles. You will practice setting scope and detail so each diagram answers one question cleanly and fits the document it supports.
What's included
5 videos2 readings1 peer review
This module turns consistency into a repeatable practice through a lightweight style guide. You will establish grid and spacing, align and distribute shapes to create a readable path, route connectors orthogonally, and model ownership with pools and lanes. You will standardize labels, type sizes, and a small accessible color set, then capture these rules in a one page guide and reusable template.
What's included
4 videos1 reading1 peer review
This module focuses on making diagrams publication ready and durable. You will apply canonical layouts for process, sequence, and state views, write task focused captions and concise alt text, and include a small legend only for custom choices. You will export to SVG for web and to PDF for print, use versioned names with a short changelog, add cross references, and run a final quality checklist for contrast, clarity, and scaling.
What's included
5 videos1 reading1 assignment2 peer reviews
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