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Slice GeoJSON data into vector tiles efficiently

Package Exports

  • geojson-vt
  • geojson-vt/src/clip
  • geojson-vt/src/convert
  • geojson-vt/src/wrap

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (geojson-vt) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

geojson-vt — GeoJSON Vector Tiles

Build Status Coverage Status

A highly efficient JavaScript library for slicing GeoJSON data into vector tiles on the fly, primarily designed to enable rendering and interacting with large geospatial datasets on the browser side (without a server).

Created to power GeoJSON in Mapbox GL JS, but can be useful in other visualization platforms like Leaflet and d3. It can also be easily used on the server as well.

Resulting tiles conform to the JSON equivalent of the vector tile specification. To make data rendering and interaction fast, the tiles are simplified, retaining the minimum level of detail appropriate for each zoom level (simplifying shapes, filtering out tiny polygons and polylines).

Demo

Here's geojson-vt action in Mapbox GL JS, dynamically loading a 100Mb US zip codes GeoJSON with 5.4 million points:

There's a convenient debug page to test out geojson-vt on different data. Make sure you have the dev version built; open debug/index.html in your browser, and drag any GeoJSON on the page, watching the console.

Usage

// build an initial index of tiles
var tileIndex = geojsonvt(geoJSON);

// request a particular tile
var features = tileIndex.getTile(z, x, y).features;

Options

You can fine-tune the results with an options object, although the defaults are sensible and work well for most use cases.

var tileIndes = geojsonvt(data, {
    maxZoom: 14,  // max zoom to preserve detail on
    tolerance: 3, // simplification tolerance (higher means simpler)
    extent: 4096, // tile extent (both width and height)
    buffer: 64,	  // tile buffer on each side
    debug: 0      // logging level (0 to disable, 1 or 2)

    indexMaxZoom: 4,        // max zoom in the initial tile index
    indexMaxPoints: 100000, // max number of points per tile in the index
    solidChildren: false    // whether to include solid tile children in the index
});

Browser builds

npm install
npm run build-dev # development build, used by the debug page
npm run build-min # minified production build

Changelog

2.1.4 (Aug 14, 2015)
  • Improved getTile to always return null on non-existing or invalid tiles.
2.1.3 (Aug 13, 2015)
  • Added solidChildren option that includes children of solid filled square tiles in the index (off by default).
  • Added back solid tile heuristics (not tiling solid filled square tiles further).
2.1.2 (Aug 13, 2015)
  • Fixed a crazy slowdown (~30x) when generating a huge number of tiles on the first run.
  • Removed clipped solid square heuristics (that actually didn't work since 2.0.0).
2.1.1 (June 18, 2015)
  • Fixed duplicate points in polygons.
2.1.0 (June 15, 2015)
  • Added proper handling for features crossing or near the date line.
2.0.1 (June 9, 2015)
  • 10-20% faster tile indexing.
  • Fixed latitude extremes not being clamped.
2.0.0 (Mar 20, 2015)
  • Breaking: maxZoom renamed to indexMaxZoom, maxPoints to indexMaxPoints, baseZoom to maxZoom.
  • Improved performance of both indexing and on-demand tile requests.
  • Improved memory footprint.
  • Better indexing defaults.
  • Fixed a bug where unnecessary memory was retained in some cases.
1.1.0 (Mar 2, 2015)
  • Add buffer and extent options.
1.0.0 (Dec 8, 2014)
  • Initial release.