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ipyopenlayers

Documentation JupyterLite Badge

A Jupyter / Openlayers bridge enabling interactive maps in the Jupyter notebook.

Usage

Adding Raster Tile Layers and Controlling Zoom on the Map

Zoom Raster

This GIF demonstrates how to add Raster Tile layers to the map and control the zoom functionality.

Adding Vector Tile Layers and Changing Their Style

Exemple de Vecteur

This GIF shows how to add Vector Tile layers to the map and modify their style.

GeoJSON Layer

Exemple GeoJson

This image illustrates how to add a GeoJSON layer to the map.

Example Repository

For a real-world example of how to use ipyopenlayers, check out this electricity dashboard project.

This project showcases the integration of ipyopenlayers in an electricity dashboard application, demonstrating a use case of the library.

Installation

You can install using pip:

pip install ipyopenlayers

If you are using Jupyter Notebook 5.2 or earlier, you may also need to enable the nbextension:

jupyter nbextension enable --py [--sys-prefix|--user|--system] ipyopenlayers

Development Installation

Create a dev environment:

conda create -n ipyopenlayers-dev -c conda-forge nodejs python jupyterlab=4.0.11
conda activate ipyopenlayers-dev

Install the python. This will also build the TS package.

pip install -e ".[test, examples]"

When developing your extensions, you need to manually enable your extensions with the notebook / lab frontend. For lab, this is done by the command:

jupyter labextension develop --overwrite .
jlpm run build

For classic notebook, you need to run:

jupyter nbextension install --sys-prefix --symlink --overwrite --py ipyopenlayers
jupyter nbextension enable --sys-prefix --py ipyopenlayers

Note that the --symlink flag doesn't work on Windows, so you will here have to run the install command every time that you rebuild your extension. For certain installations you might also need another flag instead of --sys-prefix, but we won't cover the meaning of those flags here.

How to see your changes

Typescript:

If you use JupyterLab to develop then you can watch the source directory and run JupyterLab at the same time in different terminals to watch for changes in the extension's source and automatically rebuild the widget.

# Watch the source directory in one terminal, automatically rebuilding when needed
jlpm run watch
# Run JupyterLab in another terminal
jupyter lab

After a change wait for the build to finish and then refresh your browser and the changes should take effect.

Python:

If you make a change to the python code then you will need to restart the notebook kernel to have it take effect.

Documentation

To get started with using ipyopenlayers, check out the full documentation

https://ipyopenlayers.readthedocs.io/

Try it Online

You can try ipyopenlayers below, or open many other live examples in a new browser tab with JupyterLite.

JupyterLite Badge

Updating the version

To update the version, install tbump and use it to bump the version. By default it will also create a tag.

pip install tbump
tbump <new-version>