tippecanoe
Leaflet
tippecanoe | Leaflet | |
---|---|---|
7 | 219 | |
2,587 | 40,031 | |
0.7% | 0.5% | |
1.5 | 8.9 | |
about 1 month ago | 12 days ago | |
C++ | JavaScript | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License |
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tippecanoe
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Serverless maps at 1/700 the cost of Google Maps API
If you have any geospatial data, you can tile it with tippecanoe [0], which gives you an mbtiles file. Protomaps lets you easily convert the mbtiles file into a protomaps file which you can then use.
Protomaps doesn’t limit you to any particular type of tiles, it’s just a format which allows you to read tiles out of a single file with HTTP range requests.
[0] https://github.com/mapbox/tippecanoe
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How would you generalize a very high density vector map for various zoom levels ?
or you can build several geojson add the zoom level at feature with their extension and then merge into one geojson. https://github.com/mapbox/tippecanoe
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Reducing vector tile size in QGIS for Mapbox import
Unsure how to do it with qgis. however it seems to be simple with Tippecanoe..here. They seem to have some examples that show what you need to do in the readme.
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Why do I need geoserver?
For my work when I asked that question, I had all vector data -- about 10gb -- and I used a combination of geojson's and vector tiles that I made using mapbox's tippecanoe.
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A new way to make maps with OpenStreetMap
Author here, so there are a few options:
1) If your information belongs in OpenStreetMap, you can add it via an editor like the web editor at https://openstreetmap.org - this will also benefit all other OSM users. You can then "refresh" your Protomaps download to get a new map.
2) If there isn't many point and polygons, it may sense to add them as Leaflet layers, especially if you want them to be interactive
3) Other options are creating vector tiles of your own data and merging or displaying them in the renderer (https://github.com/mapbox/tippecanoe is a great tool to do this from GeoJSON) but I don't have much to support this yet.
Leaflet
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JavaScript Libraries That You Should Know
9. Leaflet
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Animated traveling map with Leaflet
Leaflet is the most famous open-source map library, with lots of plugins. 2 of them are used to animate a marker on the map:
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5 JavaScript mapping APIs compared
Leaflet stands out as one of the top open source JavaScript libraries for crafting interactive maps. Optimized for both mobile and web devices, it is relatively small (around 42KB) and offers a ton of features, plugins, and a straightforward API. It works across all browsers and platforms.
- 2024: The year of the OpenStreetMap vector maps
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Shots: Create Mockups
Finding maplibre 'better' was more valid at the time than today, and is also subjective. The creators and maintainers of both libraries have done some great work (and are still doing so).
Back in January 2022, the stable version of leaflet, v1.7.1, was from September 2020, and was affected by some small bugs degrading the user experience. Although the release of following version seemed close, there was no clear schedule for it, and I had concerns about how maintained the library would remain.
As of today, the bug from 2015 where there is some white space between map tiles on fractional zoom levels [0] is still open.
Also, leaflet was a pain to integrate in Svelte Kit framework, because it depended on `window` and-or `document`, not available at server side.
Maplibre, on the other hands, with a feature set roughly equivalent to Leaflet, benefited from much more frequent releases, and seemed more stable across browsers and devices. It was also easier to make it work in Svelte kit.
[0]: https://github.com/Leaflet/Leaflet/issues/3575
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🌲Svelte + 🍃Leaflet + 📍 Clusters
For a personal project, I had to use Leaflet with Svelte, and I faced some problems during development.
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Embed leaflet JS maps in notion?
Do anyone have any workaround on how to get leaflet js to work inside notion, either as an embed or as code, or widget? https://leafletjs.com/
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Ask HN: When building with complex maps do you go with GMaps, Mapbox, OSM?
None of those things are what most in the GIS space would consider "complex", so you could go with any of the options you selected. For lightweight maps, I like Leaflet
https://leafletjs.com
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What’s the most beautifully documented project you’ve seen?
I have a special place in my heart for Leaflet and it’s documentation: https://leafletjs.com
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Who wants to collab for a Grab-clone or Angkas-clone web app?
Its suppose to be free: like with map data providers there's Leaflet, OpenStreet Maps and many more which are all for free.
What are some alternatives?
tilemaker - Make OpenStreetMap vector tiles without the stack
Cesium - An open-source JavaScript library for world-class 3D globes and maps :earth_americas:
PMTiles - Cloud-optimized + compressed single-file tile archives for vector and raster maps
maplibre-gl-js - MapLibre GL JS - Interactive vector tile maps in WebGL2
gdal - GDAL is an open source MIT licensed translator library for raster and vector geospatial data formats.
OpenLayers3 - OpenLayers
openmaptiles - OpenMapTiles Vector Tile Schema Implementation
folium - Python Data. Leaflet.js Maps.
geos - Geometry Engine, Open Source
mapbox.js - Mapbox JavaScript API, a Leaflet Plugin
mbtileserver - Basic Go server for mbtiles
polymaps - Polymaps is a free JavaScript library for making dynamic, interactive maps in modern web browsers.