Display rotated and skewed images in your LeafletJS maps.
This LeafletJS plugin adds a new class, L.ImageOverlay.Rotated
, subclass of
L.ImageOverlay
. The main
difference is that the position of L.ImageOverlay
is defined by a L.LatLngBounds
(the L.LatLng
s of the top-left and bottom-right corners of the image),
whereas L.ImageOverlay.Rotated
is defined by three points (the L.LatLng
s
of the top-left, top-right and bottom-left corners of the image).
The image will be rotated and skewed (as the three corner points might not form a 90-degree angle).
http://ivansanchez.github.io/Leaflet.ImageOverlay.Rotated/demo.html
To instantiate a L.ImageOverlay.Rotated
, specify the image URL, the three corner
points, and any L.ImageOverlay
options in the L.imageOverlay.rotated
factory
method, for example:
var topleft = L.latLng(40.52256691873593, -3.7743186950683594),
topright = L.latLng(40.5210255066156, -3.7734764814376835),
bottomleft = L.latLng(40.52180437272552, -3.7768453359603886);
var overlay = L.imageOverlay.rotated("./palacio.jpg", topleft, topright, bottomleft, {
opacity: 0.4,
interactive: true,
attribution: "© <a href='http://www.ign.es'>Instituto Geográfico Nacional de España</a>"
});
topleft
, topright
and bottomleft
are instances of L.LatLng
, corresponding
to the locations of the corners of the image. These three L.LatLng
s might not
neccesarily be at the top or at the left of each other.
Alternatively, the first parameter to the constructor can be an instance of HTMLImage.
Additionally, the reposition
method allows to reset the LatLng
s for the corner
points, effectively moving the image:
overlay.reposition(updatedTopLeft, updatedTopRight, updatedBottomLeft);
The classic way: copy the Leaflet.ImageOverlay.Rotate.js
file and include it
in your webpage.
npm install leaflet-imageoverlay-rotated
can be used to include this project
as a dependency. The package.json
file will allow webpack/browserify to work
its magic.
There is also some support for Bower (in the form of a bower.json
file), but
Bower is being deprecated, so NPM is preferred.
This plugin has been tested only with Leaflet 1.0.0-beta and 1.0.0-rc1. Don't expect it to work with 0.7.x.
The code for this plugin is under a Beerware license:
"THE BEER-WARE LICENSE": [email protected] wrote this file. As long as you retain this notice you can do whatever you want with this stuff. If we meet some day, and you think this stuff is worth it, you can buy me a beer in return.
The demo uses an historical building plan dated from 1863, from the archives of the Instituto Geográfico Nacional de España. These images are available under a non-commercial license.