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View and edit BPMN 2.0 diagrams in the browser.
Use the library pre-packaged or include it via npm into your node-style web-application.
To get started, create a bpmn-js instance and render BPMN 2.0 diagrams in the browser:
const xml = '...'; // my BPMN 2.0 xml
const viewer = new BpmnJS({
container: 'body'
});
try {
const { warnings } = await viewer.importXML(xml);
console.log('rendered');
} catch (err) {
console.log('error rendering', err);
}
Checkout our examples for many more supported usage scenarios.
You may attach or detach the viewer dynamically to any element on the page, too:
const viewer = new BpmnJS();
// attach it to some element
viewer.attachTo('#container');
// detach the panel
viewer.detach();
Prepare the project by installing all dependencies:
npm install
Then, depending on your use-case you may run any of the following commands:
# build the library and run all tests
npm run all
# spin up a single local modeler instance
npm start
# run the full development setup
npm run dev
You may need to perform additional project setup when building the latest development snapshot.
bpmn-js builds on top of a few powerful tools:
Use under the terms of the bpmn.io license.
17.0.2
FIX
: create hit boxes for vertical lanes (#2093)FAQs
A bpmn 2.0 toolkit and web modeler
The npm package bpmn-js receives a total of 67,164 weekly downloads. As such, bpmn-js popularity was classified as popular.
We found that bpmn-js demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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