In this review, we’ll take a look at what’s notable about LucidChart for business applications. When you first open LucidChart, the user interface is just a little bit daunting.īut I promise it will be worth your while! I apologize in advance for the length of this review – there’s a lot to cover. To the left of the workspace are shape palettes, where you can select from an impressive variety of diagram shapes. Clicking on a button at the bottom of this pane displays a dialog box where you can use checkboxes to customize which of the shape collections you want to display – everything from standard flow chart and data flow shapes and mind maps to UML, Venn, AWS architecture and entity relationship collections. LucidChart also provides a complete collection of shapes for web developers to use in creating website UI (user interface) mockups. In addition, you can import Visio stencil files into LucidChart shape libraries – very cool!īelow the shape palettes is also a button where you can upload and create collections of external images you want to use within LucidChart. The image selector lets you create folders to group your images into collections, and also lets you search the LucidChart library, IconFinder and Google Images for even more images to use in your diagrams. Like the shape palettes, the app lets you decide which image collections you want to display.
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