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  2. Mapbox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mapbox

    Mapbox is an American provider of custom online maps for websites and applications such as Foursquare, Lonely Planet, the Financial Times, The Weather Channel, Instacart, Strava and Snapchat. [3] Since 2010, it has rapidly expanded the niche of custom maps, as a response to the limited choice offered by map providers such as Google Maps .

  3. Leaflet (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leaflet_(software)

    Leaflet. Leaflet is a JavaScript library used to build web mapping applications. It allows developers without a GIS background to display tiled web maps hosted on a public server, with optional tiled overlays. It can load feature data from GeoJSON files, style it and create interactive layers, such as markers with popups when clicked.

  4. Vector tiles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vector_tiles

    Vector tiles, tiled vectors or vectiles [1] are packets of geographic data, packaged into pre-defined roughly-square shaped "tiles" for transfer over the web. This is an emerging method for delivering styled web maps, combining certain benefits of pre-rendered raster map tiles with vector map data. As with the widely used raster tiled web maps ...

  5. Tiled web map - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiled_web_map

    A tiled web map, slippy map [1] (in OpenStreetMap terminology) or tile map is a map displayed in a web browser by seamlessly joining dozens of individually requested image or vector data files. It is the most popular way to display and navigate maps, replacing other methods such as Web Map Service (WMS) which typically display a single large ...

  6. Plotly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plotly

    Plotly is a technical computing company headquartered in Montreal, Quebec, that develops online data analytics and visualization tools. Plotly provides online graphing, analytics, and statistics tools for individuals and collaboration, as well as scientific graphing libraries for Python, R, MATLAB, Perl, Julia, Arduino, JavaScript [1] and REST .

  7. QGIS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QGIS

    QGIS is a geographic information system (GIS) software that is free and open-source. [ 2] QGIS supports Windows, macOS, and Linux. [ 3] It supports viewing, editing, printing, and analysis of geospatial data in a range of data formats. QGIS was previously also known as Quantum GIS.

  8. Template:Mapbox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Mapbox

    Template. : Mapbox. Template documentation. This template uses the Wikidata property: coordinate location (P625) (see uses) This template uses the OpenStreetMap tag: wikidata (see talk; taginfo) This template adds a box to the right of the page, which includes a link to an interactive full-screen OpenStreetMap map that displays additional data ...

  9. JSON streaming - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JSON_streaming

    json-stream-es is a JavaScript/TypeScript library (frontend and backend) that can create and read concatenated JSON documents. Jackson (API) can read and write concatenated JSON content. jq lightweight flexible command-line JSON processor. Noggit Solr's streaming JSON parser for Java.