Heimer is a desktop application for creating mind maps and other suitable diagrams. It's written in Qt and targeted for Linux and Windows.
Here is a simple mind map of Heimer itself running on Ubuntu 18.04:
A very short introduction video to Heimer 1.9.0
- Adjustable grid
- Automatic layout optimization
- Autosave
- Easy-to-use UI
- Export to PNG or SVG
- Forever 100% free
- Full undo/redo
- Nice animations
- Quickly add node text and edge labels
- Save/load in XML-based .ALZ-files
- Translations in English (default), Chinese, Dutch, Finnish, French, German, Italian, Spanish
- Very fast
- Zoom in/out/fit
- Zoom with mouse wheel
It takes a lot of effort to develop and maintain Heimer, so if you find the application useful it would be very much appreciated to tip the project and help to keep the development active.
It's easy to donate via PayPal:
Thanks! :)
Heimer's source code is licensed under GNU GPLv3. See COPYING for the complete license text.
All image files, except where otherwise noted, are licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/
See https://github.com/juzzlin/Heimer/releases for available pre-built packages.
On Linux distributions that support universal Snap packages you can install Heimer like this:
$ snap install heimer
Run:
$ heimer
For more information see https://snapcraft.io/heimer and https://docs.snapcraft.io/core/install
Snap is the recommended way to install Heimer on Linux.
There are Debian packages for Ubuntu/Debian. Use some graphical tool to install, or as an example on Ubuntu 20.04
:
$ sudo apt install ./heimer-2.5.0-ubuntu-20.04_amd64.deb
Run:
$ heimer
AppImage
is a "universal" package that can (in theory) be run on all Linux platforms:
Make the image executable e.g. like this:
$ chmod 755 Heimer-2.4.0-x86_64.AppImage
Run:
$ ./Heimer-2.4.0-x86_64.AppImage
For Windows there's an installer and alternatively a ZIP-archive that just contains the Heimer executable.
You can set the language manually with --lang
option. For example, Finnish:
$ heimer --lang fi
Show all available options:
$ heimer -h
Currently the build depends on Qt 5
only (qt5-default
, qttools5-dev-tools
, qttools5-dev
, libqt5svg5-dev
packages on Ubuntu). Support for Qt 6
is preliminary and should work with CMake
.
In the case of missing qt5-default
, install these packages manually: qtbase5-dev
, qtchooser
, qt5-qmake
, qtbase5-dev-tools
.
Command to install all (at least most) needed dev packages on Ubuntu:
$ sudo apt install build-essential cmake qtbase5-dev qtchooser qt5-qmake qtbase5-dev-tools qttools5-dev-tools qttools5-dev libqt5svg5-dev
The "official" build system for Linux is CMake
.
Building for Linux in a nutshell:
$ mkdir build && cd build
$ cmake ..
$ make -j4
Run unit tests:
$ ctest
Install locally:
$ sudo make install
Debian package (.deb
) can be created like this:
$ cpack -G DEB
See Jenkinsfile
on how to build other packages in Docker.
The NSIS installer for Windows is currently built in Docker with MXE (http://mxe.cc):
$ ./scripts/build-windows-nsis
This is so very cool! A Windowsless Windows build!
Anyway, as the project depends only on Qt SDK you can use your favourite Qt setup to build the project on Windows.
Needed Dockerfiles can be found at https://github.com/juzzlin/Dockerfiles