valhalla
tippecanoe
valhalla | tippecanoe | |
---|---|---|
10 | 7 | |
4,202 | 777 | |
1.9% | 5.8% | |
9.3 | 8.0 | |
6 days ago | 8 days ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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valhalla
- Seeking a Simple and Cost-Effective Tool for Calculating Distances and Travel Times in Node.js Backend
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Tesla has the best navigation software in the business
Does Tesla even do their own routing? As far as I am aware they use https://github.com/valhalla/valhalla
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How The Post is replacing Mapbox with open source solutions
Also see valhalla for an open source routing engine: https://github.com/valhalla/valhalla/
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Boost.Graph user survey
I use it to implement a solver for the Chinese Postman Problem for an open source routing engine named Valhalla (https://github.com/valhalla/valhalla/).
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[OC] All Roads Lead to Richmond - The quickest route to the capital city from anywhere within the state of Virginia
Link to library: https://github.com/valhalla/valhalla
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How to Learn Nix
Love the idea of a blog post like this. I tried something very similar a couple weeks ago on a c++ project, both in hopes it might lead to an improved user experience, and also for others struggling to figure it out.
https://github.com/valhalla/valhalla/discussions/3540
- How to get Distance matrix for ~400 locations without paying hundreds of Euros.
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Bolt v2... navigation cues lagging, auto start/stop finicky
Note that Wahoo doesn't implement their own routing, the Bolt is using OpenStreetMap and Valhalla (https://github.com/valhalla/valhalla) to do routing. That's probably a reason why bugs are never fixed, it's not their code.
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[OC] Areas reachable by rail+foo within two hours from Bristol Temple Meads Station. Starting different times over a day.
The pedestrian isochrone generation was done using (https://github.com/valhalla/valhalla)
tippecanoe
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Geospatial Nix – create, use and deploy today
This is awesome. Such a great use case for nix.
I do a lot of geospatial processing in the cloud and I've been using Tippecanoe a lot to create vector tiles. It pairs well with PM Tiles for storing on the cloud. It seriously increases the web app performance for massive data sets. I queue these up with ECS tasks to process our json/csv/parquet input and create optimize vector tile outputs.
https://github.com/felt/tippecanoe
https://github.com/protomaps/PMTiles
Tippecanoe would be a great addition to your nix packages. I've been thinking more and more about how Nix could fit into this pipeline.
Great work!
- Protomaps – A free and open source map of the world
- How The Post is replacing Mapbox with open source solutions
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Self-Hosted Vector Tiles
I'm the author of a few of the tools mentioned in this post!
A convenient new development is instead of using tippecanoe -> go-pmtiles to create PMTiles archives, you can now output .pmtiles directly:
tippecanoe -o bks2.pmtiles mainroad.geojson ...
This is available in Tippecanoe (https://github.com/felt/tippecanoe) v2.17 and later.
Thanks to Felt (https://felt.com) for supporting this open source work.
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COMTiles (Cloud Optimized Map Tiles) hosted on Amazon S3 and Visualized with MapLibre GL JS
tippecanoe
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How would you generalize a very high density vector map for various zoom levels ?
Things I have tried so far: - Just using native vector tile conversion as it involves feature simplification. Doesn't work since smallest feature just disappear, resulting in blank regions instead of "averaged" regions. - Using tippecanoe's built in features to drop/merge in densest zones. Results are disappointing because of unexpected (and too big) differences between each zoom level. - Rasterizing the map, sieving, then vectorizing with smoothing. Doesn't work because pixel information are mixed. I would need a way to rasterize while preserving the land-cover category (with some kind of majority filter ?), but haven't find a way to do this with any QGis built-in or plugin feature.
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OpenStreepMap 2012 vs. 2022
Take a look at Tippecanoe, which is under active development again[0]. The original developer, Erica Fischer (who is wonderful to work with), has a fork[1] where new work is happening.
[0] https://felt.com/blog/erica-fischer-tippecanoe-at-felt
[1] https://github.com/felt/tippecanoe
https://felt.com/blog/erica-fischer-tippecanoe-at-felt
What are some alternatives?
Open Source Routing Machine (OSRM) - Open Source Routing Machine - C++ backend
planetiler - Flexible tool to build planet-scale vector tilesets from OpenStreetMap data fast
Graphhopper - Open source routing engine for OpenStreetMap. Use it as Java library or standalone web server.
tippecanoe - Build vector tilesets from large collections of GeoJSON features.
tilemaker - Make OpenStreetMap vector tiles without the stack
Openstreetmap - The Rails application that powers OpenStreetMap
go-pmtiles - Single-file executable tool for working with PMTiles archives
Mapbox GL - Interactive, thoroughly customizable maps in native Android, iOS, macOS, Node.js, and Qt applications, powered by vector tiles and OpenGL
maputnik - An open source visual editor for the 'MapLibre Style Specification'
pygeoapi - pygeoapi is a Python server implementation of the OGC API suite of standards. The project emerged as part of the next generation OGC API efforts in 2018 and provides the capability for organizations to deploy a RESTful OGC API endpoint using OpenAPI, GeoJSON, and HTML. pygeoapi is open source and released under an MIT license.
osmium-tool - Command line tool for working with OpenStreetMap data based on the Osmium library.