From 2e35b5ee5b00e4c67f9e3302764c8a0802998f8d Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jakub Hampl Date: Fri, 14 Jun 2019 15:16:44 +0100 Subject: Update readme with clearer instructions --- README.md | 246 ++++++++++---------------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 40 insertions(+), 206 deletions(-) diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 860d8aa..bd08c04 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -2,7 +2,7 @@ Great looking and performant maps in Elm using MapboxGl. Discuss in #maps on the Elm Slack. -### High quality mapping in Elm +### High Quality Mapping in Elm There have been [some attempts](https://github.com/gampleman/elm-visualization/wiki/Data-Visualization-Packages#maps) to make native elm mapping packages. However, Mapbox offers a very complex solution that offers some killer features that are difficult to reproduce: @@ -15,228 +15,62 @@ The way this works, the map accepts a configuration object called a **style**. T This library allows you to specify the **style** declaratively passing it into a specific element in your view function. However, the map element holds some internal state: mostly about the position of the viewport and all the event handling needed to manipulate it. In my experience this is mostly what you want - the default map interactions tend to be appropriate. So this library includes commands that tell the map to modify its internal state (including stuff like animations etc). -### How this works +### How does this Work? -This library uses a combination of ports and custom elements. To get going, -install the accompanying npm library: +This is a hybrid library that consists both of Elm and JavaScript parts. It uses a combination of ports and custom elements for communication between them. - npm install --save elm-mapbox - -Microsoft Edge you will needs a polyfill to use custom elements. The polyfill provides by -webcomponents.org is known to work https://github.com/webcomponents/custom-elements +### Getting Started -Then include the library into your page. If you don't have any JS build system setup, -probably the easiest is to add: - -```html - -``` +To get going, install the package and the accompanying npm library: -If you are running a module bundler, you should be able to + elm install gampleman/elm-mapbox + npm install --save elm-mapbox -```javascript -import {registerCustomElement, registerPorts} from "elm-mapbox"; -``` +Microsoft Edge needs a polyfill to use custom elements. The polyfill provided by +webcomponents.org is known to work https://github.com/webcomponents/custom-elements: -instead. + npm install --save @webcomponents/custom-elements -Then, when you are instantiating your Elm application, change it from: +Then include the library into your page. How exactly to do this depends on how you are building your application. We recommend using [Parcel](https://parceljs.org/), since it is super easy to setup. Then you will want to make your `index.js` look something like this: ```javascript -var app = Elm.MyApp.init(); -``` +// polyfill for custom elements. Optional, see https://caniuse.com/#feat=custom-elementsv1 +import "@webcomponents/custom-elements"; -to +import { registerCustomElement, registerPorts } from "elm-mapbox"; -```javascript -elmMapbox.registerCustomElement(); -var app = Elm.MyApp.init(); -elmMapbox.registerPorts(app); -``` +// This brings in mapbox required CSS +import "mapbox-gl/dist/mapbox-gl.css"; -(where `MyApp` is your main module and `init` can be any way of instantiating an elm application). +// Your Elm application +import { Elm } from "./src/Main.elm"; -It is important that these operations proceed in this order, i.e. the custom element is registered before the application first renders. The ports can only be setup immediately afterwards (as they need a reference to the application). +// A Mapbox API token. Register at https://mapbox.com to get one of these. It's free. +const token = + "pk.eyJ1Ijovm,vedfg"; -Additionally, you may pass in your mapbox token as an option through this method: +// This will add elm-mapbox custom element into the page's registry. +// This **must** happen before your application attempts to render a map. +registerCustomElement({ + token +}); -```javascript -elmMapbox.registerCustomElement({token: 'pk45.rejkgnwejk'}); -var app = Elm.MyApp.init(); -elmMapbox.registerPorts(app); +// Initialize your Elm application. There are a few different ways +// to do this, whichever you choose doesn't matter. +var app = Elm.Main.init({ flags: {} }); + +// Register ports. You only need to do this if you use the port integration. +// I usually keep this commented out until I need it. +registerPorts(app); ``` -Next, optionally, setup a ports module. The best way to do this is to to copy [this file](https://github.com/gampleman/elm-mapbox/blob/master/examples/MapCommands.elm) into your project. +Next, optionally, setup a ports module. The best way to do this is to to copy [this file](https://github.com/gampleman/elm-mapbox/blob/master/examples/MapCommands.elm) into your project. I usually name it `Map/Cmd.elm` This will allow you to easily use the commands to control parts of your map interactions imperatively - for example you can command your map to fly to a particular location. -This will allow you to easily use the commands to control parts of your map interactions imperatively. +Finally, you will need to setup a base style. You can copy some of the [example styles](https://github.com/gampleman/elm-mapbox/blob/master/examples/Styles), or you can use the (beta) [Style code generator](https://code.gampleman.eu/elm-mapbox/style-generator/) in conjunction with [Mapbox Studio](https://www.mapbox.com/mapbox-studio/). ### Example -Then you can go all out! - -```elm -module Example01 exposing (main) - -import Browser -import Html exposing (div, text) -import Html.Attributes exposing (style) -import Json.Decode -import Json.Encode -import LngLat exposing (LngLat) -import MapCommands -import Mapbox.Cmd.Option as Opt -import Mapbox.Element exposing (..) -import Mapbox.Expression as E exposing (false, float, int, str, true) -import Mapbox.Layer as Layer -import Mapbox.Source as Source -import Mapbox.Style as Style exposing (Style(..)) - - -main = - Browser.document - { init = init - , view = view - , update = update - , subscriptions = \m -> Sub.none - } - - -init () = - ( { position = LngLat 0 0, features = [] }, Cmd.none ) - - -type Msg - = Hover EventData - | Click EventData - - -update msg model = - case msg of - Hover { lngLat, renderedFeatures } -> - ( { model | position = lngLat, features = renderedFeatures }, Cmd.none ) - - Click { lngLat, renderedFeatures } -> - ( { model | position = lngLat, features = renderedFeatures }, MapCommands.fitBounds [ Opt.linear True, Opt.maxZoom 10 ] ( LngLat.map (\a -> a - 0.2) lngLat, LngLat.map (\a -> a + 0.2) lngLat ) ) - - -geojson = - Json.Decode.decodeString Json.Decode.value """ -{ - "type": "FeatureCollection", - "features": [ - { - "type": "Feature", - "id": 1, - "properties": { - "name": "Bermuda Triangle", - "area": 1150180 - }, - "geometry": { - "type": "Polygon", - "coordinates": [ - [ - [-64.73, 32.31], - [-80.19, 25.76], - [-66.09, 18.43], - [-64.73, 32.31] - ] - ] - } - } - ] -} -""" |> Result.withDefault (Json.Encode.object []) - - -hoveredFeatures : List Json.Encode.Value -> MapboxAttr msg -hoveredFeatures = - List.map (\feat -> ( feat, [ ( "hover", Json.Encode.bool True ) ] )) - >> featureState - - -view model = - { title = "Mapbox Example" - , body = - [ css - , div [ style "width" "100vw", style "height" "100vh" ] - [ map - [ maxZoom 5 - , onMouseMove Hover - , onClick Click - , id "my-map" - , eventFeaturesLayers [ "changes" ] - , hoveredFeatures model.features - ] - (Style - { transition = Style.defaultTransition - , light = Style.defaultLight - , sources = - [ Source.vectorFromUrl "composite" "mapbox://mapbox.mapbox-terrain-v2,mapbox.mapbox-streets-v7,astrosat.07pz1g3y" - , Source.geoJSONFromValue "changes" [] geojson - ] - , misc = - [ Style.name "light" - , Style.defaultCenter <| LngLat 20.39789404164037 43.22523201923144 - , Style.defaultZoomLevel 1.5967483759772743 - , Style.sprite "mapbox://sprites/mapbox/light" - , Style.glyphs "mapbox://fonts/mapbox/{fontstack}/{range}.pbf" - ] - , layers = - [ Layer.background "background" - [ E.rgba 246 246 244 1 |> Layer.backgroundColor - ] - , Layer.fill "landcover" - "composite" - [ Layer.sourceLayer "landcover" - , E.any - [ E.getProperty (str "class") |> E.isEqual (str "wood") - , E.getProperty (str "class") |> E.isEqual (str "scrub") - , E.getProperty (str "class") |> E.isEqual (str "grass") - , E.getProperty (str "class") |> E.isEqual (str "crop") - ] - |> Layer.filter - , Layer.fillColor (E.rgba 227 227 227 1) - , Layer.fillOpacity (float 0.6) - ] - , Layer.symbol "place-city-lg-n" - "composite" - [ Layer.sourceLayer "place_label" - , Layer.minzoom 1 - , Layer.maxzoom 14 - , Layer.filter <| - E.all - [ E.getProperty (str "scalerank") |> E.greaterThan (int 2) - , E.getProperty (str "type") |> E.isEqual (str "city") - ] - , Layer.textField <| - E.format - [ E.getProperty (str "name_en") - |> E.formatted - |> E.fontScaledBy (float 1.2) - , E.formatted (str "\n") - , E.getProperty (str "name") - |> E.formatted - |> E.fontScaledBy (float 0.8) - |> E.withFont (E.strings [ "DIN Offc Pro Medium" ]) - ] - ] - , Layer.fill "changes" - "changes" - [ Layer.fillOpacity (E.ifElse (E.toBool (E.featureState (str "hover"))) (float 0.9) (float 0.1)) - ] - ] - } - ) - , div [ style "position" "absolute", style "bottom" "20px", style "left" "20px" ] [ text (LngLat.toString model.position) ] - ] - ] - } -``` -### [Generating the Elm Style Code](https://code.gampleman.eu/elm-mapbox/style-generator/) - -There is a very rough version of a [tool that can help generate styles](https://code.gampleman.eu/elm-mapbox/style-generator/) for this library. - -The [examples/Styles](https://github.com/gampleman/elm-mapbox/tree/master/examples/Styles) folder has the default Mapbox styles as code, which you can use to start of your project. +See [Example01](https://github.com/gampleman/elm-geospatial/blob/master/examples/src/Example01.elm) for an example application. ### Support @@ -245,10 +79,10 @@ This library is supported in all modern browsers. The `elmMapbox` library has a `supported` function that can be injected via flags: ```javascript -import elmMapbox from "elm-mapbox"; +import {supported} from "elm-mapbox"; var app = Elm.MyApp.fullscreen({ - mapboxSupported: elmMapbox.supported({ + mapboxSupported: supported({ // If true , the function will return false if the performance of // Mapbox GL JS would be dramatically worse than expected (e.g. a // software WebGL renderer would be used). @@ -259,14 +93,14 @@ var app = Elm.MyApp.fullscreen({ ### Customizing the JS side -The `elmMapbox.registerCustomElement` function accepts an options object that takes the following options: +The `registerCustomElement` function accepts an options object that takes the following options: - `token`: the Mapbox token. If you don't pass it here, you will need to use the `token` Elm attribute. - `onMount` a callback that gives you access to the mapbox instance whenever a map gets instantiated. Mostly useful for registering [plugins](https://www.mapbox.com/mapbox-gl-js/plugins). Furthermore, the elm-mapbox element exposes its internal mapboxgl.js reference as a `map` property, which you can use if necessary (although, worth mentioning on slack if you are needing to do this). -The `elmMapbox.registerPorts` function accepts an option object that takes the following options: +The `registerPorts` function accepts an option object that takes the following options: - `easingFunctions`: an object whose values are easing functions (i.e. they take a number between 0..1 and return a number between 0..1). You can refer to these with the `easing` option in the Cmd.Option module. -- cgit v1.2.3