Hélène Draux - GIS specialist/Cartographer.weekly - semanal - săptămânal - haftalık - 毎週.Blog Katedry rozvojových studií v Olomouci.International Society for Participatory Mapping.Participatory method… on Participatory methods: GPS… Public Participation… on From Mental Maps to GeoPartici…Įmotional mapping an… on Participatory GIS on Iceland… NTNU Trondheim is lo… on Another visit to NTNU Trondhei…įrom Mental Maps to… on From Mental Maps to GeoPartici…
Tags A-Frame AR.js ARAMANI Augmented Reality balloon mapping call for papers Cartographic Journal Citizen Science Coding Community mapping conference conference notes crowdsourcing DEF journal development studies emotional maps environment ephemeral fellowship foresight geogames geography GeoParticipation Google Google Maps gps mapping grant grassroots mapping ground mapping Hiro ICA Iceland ISPM JavaScript Java Script job offers Kibera kite mapping Leaflet mapping mental maps multimedia mapping neogeography Norway NTNU Olomouc online application OpenStreetMap P3DM Participatory geography Participatory GIS Participatory mapping Participatory Urban Planning PhD Photo Mapping Playful geography Prague presetations research visit Rio de Janeiro Scale mapping scientific journal sketch mapping Transect Mapping Transect Walk Trondheim University of Iceland urban studies VGI webinar Recent Comments From „Hello, World!“ to AR web apps – part 1.From „Hello, World!“ to AR web apps – part 2.From „Hello, World!“ to AR web apps – part 3.From „Hello, World!“ to AR web apps – part 4.From „Hello, World!“ to AR web apps – part 5.Have a great day and thanks for your comments. In the next installment, I’ll come back to AR and the markers you need to understand for using AR mobile apps. Yes, it’s “just a boring map”, but it’s MINE! It’s written using open-source libraries, layers created/edited in open-source QGIS. I spent a few hours on this (my map has a bit more layers and symbology), but in the end I don’t think it was that difficult. This describes how I defined the layer symbology, map center and zoom, base map selection, layer on/off panel, and scale. L.control.layers(baseLayers,overlays).addTo(map) I just opened the geojson in notepad and edited it – see below: Preparing the page to insert the Leaflet map – I followed the Leaflet Quick Start Guide, so: CSS and link to Leaflet JavaScript įor this, I had a geojson “districts” that I saved as *.js and used this command to load it. I’ll try to describe the process of how I created the map in a very simple way, hopefully it will help beginners like me – some of the steps took me a really long time, I’m sure it could have been done differently, easier, etc. I’ll admit without torture, I knew Leaflet was used for web maps, that’s where I ended up – so – it’s an open-source JavaScript library for creating web map applications – see Wikipedia or for more. This brings us to the magic word Leaflet. The second attempt was the GISQuick plugin, which also looks promising on the web, but I couldn’t get it to work at all, so I tried to “write” the whole thing myself. Plugin.QGIS2Web examples (layers preparation, export and final map). I would like to replace the WordPress Media Library Uploader within the admin section to use Filepond.