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openlayers/README.md
Tim Schaub 90c3c1db81 Add title to license to clarify that it is BSD 2-Clause
The BSD 2-Clause License is a simplified version of the BSD 3-Clause License.  This license was popularized by the FreeBSD project and is sometimes referred to as the "FreeBSD License" (see https://opensource.org/licenses/BSD-2-Clause and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BSD_licenses#2-clause).  To clarify that the OpenLayers License uses the BSD 2-Clause License template, this change adds "The 2-Clause BSD License" to the top of our license file.  In addition, this change makes our license a verbatim copy of the template at https://opensource.org/licenses/BSD-2-Clause with only the copyright holders added.  This change is not intended to change the project's license, only to clarify the template used for that license.  See https://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/openlayers-dev/2011-May/007555.html for the original motion to switch to the BSD 2-Clause License (also known as the FreeBSD License).
2019-03-11 22:27:35 -06:00

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OpenLayers

OpenLayers is a high-performance, feature-packed library for creating interactive maps on the web. It can display map tiles, vector data and markers loaded from any source on any web page. OpenLayers has been developed to further the use of geographic information of all kinds. It is completely free, Open Source JavaScript, released under the BSD 2-Clause License.

Getting Started

Install the ol package:

npm install ol

Import just what you need for your application:

import Map from 'ol/Map';
import View from 'ol/View';
import TileLayer from 'ol/layer/Tile';
import XYZ from 'ol/source/XYZ';

new Map({
  target: 'map',
  layers: [
    new TileLayer({
      source: new XYZ({
        url: 'https://{a-c}.tile.openstreetmap.org/{z}/{x}/{y}.png'
      })
    })
  ],
  view: new View({
    center: [0, 0],
    zoom: 2
  })
});

See the following examples for more detail on bundling OpenLayers with your application:

IntelliSense support and type checking for VS Code

The ol package contains a src/ folder with JSDoc annotated sources. TypeScript can get type definitions from these sources with a jsconfig.json config file in the project root:

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "checkJs": true,
    // Point to the JSDoc typed sources when using modules from the ol package
    "baseUrl": "./",
    "paths": {
      "ol": ["node_modules/ol/src"],
      "ol/*": ["node_modules/ol/src/*"]
    }
  },
  "include": [
    "**/*.js",
    "node_modules/ol/**/*.js"
  ]
}

Project template with this configuration: https://gist.github.com/9a7253cb4712e8bf38d75d8ac898e36c.

Note that the above only works when authoring in plain JavaScript. For similar configurations with a tsconfig.json in TypeScript projects, your mileage may vary.

Supported Browsers

OpenLayers runs on all modern browsers that support HTML5 and ECMAScript 5. This includes Chrome, Firefox, Safari and Edge. For older browsers and platforms like Internet Explorer (down to version 9) and Android 4.x, polyfills for requestAnimationFrame and Element.prototype.classList are required, and using the KML format requires a polyfill for URL.

Documentation

Check out the hosted examples, the workshop or the API documentation.

Bugs

Please use the GitHub issue tracker for all bugs and feature requests. Before creating a new issue, do a quick search to see if the problem has been reported already.

Contributing

Please see our guide on contributing if you're interested in getting involved.

Community

CircleCI