django-leaflet allows you to use Leaflet in your Django projects.
It embeds Leaflet in version 0.7.3.
Main purposes of having a python package for the Leaflet Javascript library :
- Install and enjoy ;
- Do not embed Leaflet assets in every Django project ;
- Enjoy geometry edition with Leaflet form widget ;
- Control apparence and settings of maps from Django settings (e.g. at deployment) ;
- Reuse Leaflet map initialization code (e.g. local projections) ;
note: | django-leaflet is compatible with django-geojson fields, which allow handling geographic data without spatial database. |
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Last stable version:
pip install django-leaflet
Last development version (master branch):
pip install -e git+https://github.com/makinacorpus/django-leaflet.git#egg=django-leaflet
Add
leaflet
to yourINSTALLED_APPS
Make sure
django.contrib.staticfiles
is also in yourINSTALLED_APPS
; Django >= 1.3 includes this contrib app by defaultAdd the HTML header:
{% load leaflet_tags %} <head> ... {% leaflet_js %} {% leaflet_css %} </head>
Add the map in your page, providing a name:
... <body> ... {% leaflet_map "yourmap" %} ... </body>
Your map shows up!
You can use the Leaflet API as usual. There are two ways to grab a reference on the just initialized map and options.
Using Javascript callback function
The easy way :
<script type="text/javascript"> function map_init_basic (map, options) { ... L.marker([50.5, 30.5]).addTo(map); ... } </script> {% leaflet_map "yourmap" callback="window.map_init_basic" %}
Using events
If you don't want to expose global callbacks :
<script type="text/javascript"> window.addEventListener("map:init", function (e) { var detail = e.detail; ... L.marker([50.5, 30.5]).addTo(detail.map); ... }, false); </script>
Event object has two properties : map
and options
(initialization).
For Internet Explorer support, we fallback on jQuery if available
$(window).on('map:init', function (e) { var detail = e.originalEvent ? e.originalEvent.detail : e.detail; ... L.marker([50.5, 30.5]).addTo(detail.map); ... });
If you want to support archaic browsers and still avoid jQuery,
django-leaflet comes with a minimalist polyfill for events.
Add it in <head>
this way
<!--[if IE 8]><script src="{% static "leaflet/eventlister.ie8.js" %}"></script><!--<![endif]--> <!--[if lt IE 8]><script src="{% static "leaflet/eventlister.ie6-7.js" %}"></script><!--<![endif]-->
CSS is your friend:
<style> .leaflet-container { /* all maps */ width: 600px; height: 400px; } #specialbigmap { height: 800px; } </style>
In order to configure django-leaflet, just add a new section in your settings:
LEAFLET_CONFIG = { # conf here }
And add some of the following entries.
You can configure a global spatial extent for your maps, that will automatically center your maps, restrict panning and add reset view and scale controls. (See advanced usage to tweak that.):
'SPATIAL_EXTENT': (5.0, 44.0, 7.5, 46)
In addition to limiting your maps with SPATIAL_EXTENT
, you can also specify
initial map center, default, min and max zoom level:
'DEFAULT_CENTER': (6.0, 45.0), 'DEFAULT_ZOOM': 16, 'MIN_ZOOM': 3, 'MAX_ZOOM': 18,
The tuple/list must contain (lat,lng) coords.
To globally add a tiles layer to your maps:
'TILES': 'http://{s}.tile.openstreetmap.org/{z}/{x}/{y}.png'
This setting can also be a list of tuples (name, url, options)
.
The python dict options
accepts all the Leaflet tileLayers options.
If it contains several layers, a layer switcher will then be added automatically.
'TILES': [('Satellite', 'http://server/a/...', {'attribution': '© Big eye', 'maxZoom': 16}), ('Streets', 'http://server/b/...', {'attribution': '© Contributors'})]
To globally add an overlay layer, use the same syntax as tiles:
'OVERLAYS': [('Cadastral', 'http://server/a/{z}/{x}/{y}.png', {'attribution': '© IGN'})]
Currently, overlay layers from settings are limited to tiles. For vectorial overlays, you will have to add them via JavaScript (see events).
To globally add an attribution prefix on maps (most likely an empty string)
'ATTRIBUTION_PREFIX': 'Powered by django-leaflet'
Default is None
, which leaves the value to Leaflet's default.
Scale control may be set to show 'metric' (m/km), or 'imperial' (mi/ft) scale lines, or 'both'. Default is 'metric'.
Enable metric and imperial scale control:
'SCALE': 'both'
Disable scale control:
'SCALE': None
Shows a small map in the corner which shows the same as the main map with a set zoom offset:
'MINIMAP': True
By default it shows the tiles of the first layer in the list.
By default, a button appears below the zoom controls and, when clicked, shows the entire map. To remove this button, set:
'RESET_VIEW': False
Since 0.7.0, the leaflet_map
template tag no longer registers initialization functions in global scope,
and no longer adds map objects into window.maps
array by default. To restore these features, use:
'NO_GLOBALS' = False
If you are using staticfiles compression libraries such as django_compressor,
which can do any of compressing, concatenating or renaming javascript files,
this may break Leaflet's own ability to determine its installed path, and in
turn break the method L.Icon.Default.imagePath()
.
To use Django's own knowledge of its static files to force this value explicitly, use:
'FORCE_IMAGE_PATH': True
To ease the usage of plugins, django-leaflet allows specifying a set of plugins, that can later be referred to from the template tags by name:
'PLUGINS': { 'name-of-plugin': { 'css': ['relative/path/to/stylesheet.css', '/root/path/to/stylesheet.css'], 'js': 'http://absolute-url.example.com/path/to/script.js', 'auto-include': True, }, . . . }
Both 'css' and 'js' support identical features for specifying resource URLs:
- can be either a plain string or a list of URLs
- each string can be:
- absolute URL - will be included as-is; example:
http://absolute-url.example.com/path/to/script.js
- a URL beginning from the root - will be included as-is; example:
/root/path/to/stylesheet.css
- a relative URL - settings.STATIC_URL will be prepended; example:
relative/path/to/stylesheet.css
will be included as /static/relative/path/to/stylesheet.css (depending on your setting for STATIC_URL)
- absolute URL - will be included as-is; example:
Now, use leaflet_js
and leaflet_css
tags to load CSS and JS resources of
configured Leaflet plugins.
By default only plugins with 'auto-include'
as True will be included.
To include specific plugins in the page, specify plugin names, comma separated:
{% load leaflet_tags %} <head> ... {% leaflet_js plugins="bouncemarker,draw" %} {% leaflet_css plugins="bouncemarker,draw" %} </head>
To include all plugins configured in LEAFLET_CONFIG['PLUGINS']
, use:
{% leaflet_js plugins="ALL" %} {% leaflet_css plugins="ALL" %}
A Leaflet widget is provided to edit geometry fields. It embeds Leaflet.draw in version 0.2.2.
from django.contrib import admin from leaflet.admin import LeafletGeoAdmin from .models import WeatherStation admin.site.register(WeatherStation, LeafletGeoAdmin)
With Django >= 1.6:
from django import forms from leaflet.forms.widgets import LeafletWidget class WeatherStationForm(forms.ModelForm): class Meta: model = WeatherStation fields = ('name', 'geom') widgets = {'geom': LeafletWidget()}
With all Django versions:
from django import forms from leaflet.forms.fields import PointField class WeatherStationForm(forms.ModelForm): geom = PointField() class Meta: model = WeatherStation fields = ('name', 'geom')
The related template would look like this:
{% load leaflet_tags %} <html> <head> {% leaflet_js plugins="forms" %} {% leaflet_css plugins="forms" %} </head> <body> <h1>Edit {{ object }}</h1> <form action="POST"> {{ form }} <input type="submit"/> </form> </body> </html>
Every map field will trigger an event you can use to add your custom machinery :
map.on('map:loadfield', function (e) { ... // Customize map for field console.log(e.field, e.fieldid); ... });
If you need a reusable customization of widgets maps, first override the JavaScript field behaviour by extending L.GeometryField
, then in Django subclass the LeafletWidget
to specify the custom geometry_field_class
.
YourGeometryField = L.GeometryField.extend({ addTo: function (map) { L.GeometryField.prototype.addTo.call(this, map); // Customize map for field console.log(this); }, // See GeometryField source (static/leaflet/leaflet.forms.js) to override more stuff... });
class YourMapWidget(LeafletWidget): geometry_field_class = 'YourGeometryField' class YourForm(forms.ModelForm): class Meta: model = YourModel fields = ('name', 'geom') widgets = {'geom': YourMapWidget()}
It's possible to add extras JS/CSS or auto-include forms plugins everywhere:
LEAFLET_CONFIG = { 'PLUGINS': { 'forms': { 'auto-include': True } } }
( It will be merged over default minimal set required for edition )
- It relies on global settings for map initialization.
- It works with local map projections. But SRID is specified globally
through
LEAFLET_CONFIG['SRID']
as described below. - Javascript component for de/serializing fields value is pluggable.
- Javascript component for Leaflet.draw behaviour initialization is pluggable.
callback
: javascript function name for initialization callback. (Default: None).fitextent
: control if map initial view shoud be set to extent setting. (Default:True
). Setting fixextent toFalse
will prevent view reset and scale controls to be added.creatediv
: control if the leaflet map tags creates a new div or not. (Default:True
). Useful to put the javascript code in the header or footer instead of the body of the html document. If used, do not forget to create the div manually.loadevent
: One or more space-separated window events that trigger map initialization. (Default:load
, i.e. all page resources loaded). If empty values is provided, then map initialization is immediate. And with a wrong value, the map is never initialized. :)settings_overrides
: Map with overrides to the default LEAFLET_CONFIG settings. (Default: {}).
It is possible to dynamically override settings in LeafletWidget initi:
from leaflet.forms.widgets import LeafletWidget class WeatherStationForm(forms.ModelForm): class Meta: model = WeatherStation fields = ('name', 'geom') widgets = {'geom': LeafletWidget(attrs={ 'settings_overrides': { 'DEFAULT_CENTER': (6.0, 45.0), } })}
It is possible to setup the map spatial reference in LEAFLET_CONFIG
:
'SRID': 2154 # See http://spatialreference.org
Additional parameter is required to compute scale levels : the tiles extent in local projection:
'TILES_EXTENT': [924861,6375196,985649,6448688],
For more information, have a look at this example.
Example of TileCache configuration compatible with Leaflet:
[scan-portrait] type=WMSLayer layers=scan100,scan25 url=http://server/wms? extension=jpg tms_type=google srs=EPSG:2154 bbox=924861,6375196,985649,6448688 [cache] type=GoogleDisk expire=2592000 base=/tmp/tiles
By default, django-leaflet will try to load the spatial reference from your static files at "proj4js/{{ srid }}.js". If it fails, it will eventually rely on spatialreference.org.
- Mathieu Leplatre
- Ariel Núñez
- Boris Chervenkov
- Marco Badan
- Bruno Renié
- Simon Thépot
- Thibault Jouannic
- jnm
- Manel Clos
- Gaël Utard
- Alex Marandon
- ollb
- smcoll
- jnm
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- Florent Lebreton
- rgreenemun
- Marco Badan
- David Martinez Morata
- Lesser GNU Public License
- Leaflet Copyright - 2010-2011 CloudMade, Vladimir Agafonkin