livediagram is a web app where people build diagrams and mindmaps together in real time. It is a multiplayer canvas in the browser: anyone with access to a diagram can join, see other collaborators' cursors and edits live, and contribute at the same time. The result is a shared visual artifact, a flowchart, an architecture diagram, a mindmap, or a brainstorm board, that a team builds together rather than one person authoring and the rest reviewing.
A multiplayer canvas
The heart of livediagram is the canvas. You drop down shapes, connect them with arrows, drag things around, and the diagram takes shape as you work. When more than one person is in the same diagram, everyone sees live cursors, who has what selected, and every change as it happens.
- Shapes and arrows for flowcharts, system diagrams, and process maps. See Shapes and arrows.
- Mindmaps and brainstorms built from quick, keyboard-driven nodes.
- Real-time presence so collaborators never overwrite each other by surprise.
- Tabs to keep related views of one diagram in a single place. See Tabs.
Built for teams who think visually
livediagram is aimed at people who need to think together, visually: engineering teams sketching architecture and sequence flows, product and design teams mapping journeys and information architecture, and cross-functional groups in workshops, planning sessions, and retrospectives. The unit of value is the team, not the single author.
To make that frictionless, the canvas always works without signing in. You can land on a blank diagram, build something real, and hand the link to a colleague who edits it straight away, no account required. See Sharing your diagram.
Free and open source
livediagram is MIT-licensed and free for everyone. There is no paid tier and no plan to introduce one. A free hosted version runs at livediagram.app, and because the whole codebase is open, anyone can self-host it on their own infrastructure. Every feature is available to every user. See Why use livediagram?.
The fastest way to understand livediagram is to use it. Open a new diagram and drop in a couple of shapes, no sign-up needed.
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