Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
122 lines (102 loc) · 9 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

122 lines (102 loc) · 9 KB

Crowdmap: Basic

This is an attempt to create the most basic example of a web map for crowdsourcing... anything that users can draw on a map (points, squares, circles, lines, polygons...). It uses Leaflet.draw (demo), an extension of the Leaflet javascript mapping library to enable users to draw shapes on a map and then inserts them in a CartoDB table. The webmap is hosted on gh-pages, which allows you to host free static websites on github, the codesharing website that you're reading this on currently. The only permitted behaviour is for users to view previously submitted input and to submit their own input. Editing or deleting input is not permitted. Examples of possible implementations include:

Example Screenshot
Try it here

Table of Contents

###1. Set up guide
###2. Now what?
###3. How it works

Guide

Set Up Accounts and Fork Repository

  1. Get a github and a cartodb account.
  1. Fork the repository by clicking on the fork icon at the top right of this page, like the image below. To learn more about forking, click here.

After Forking this Repository

  1. Perform all the steps under the CartoDB heading, then.
  2. Modify the following variables in index.html (search for "TODO"), you can edit this after cloning, or you can edit directly in your web-browser by clicking on the index.html filename above and then clicking on the pencil icon in the top right. cartoDBusername to your cartodb username cartoDBinsertfunction to the name of your insert function cartoDBtablename to the name of your table in CartoDB
  3. Go to http://YOURGITHUBUSERNAME.github.io/crowdmap-basic to see your own map, and start submitting data, you can see the submitted data by going to the data view for that table in your CartoDB account.
  4. Modify the code to your whims (now what?).

CartoDB

  1. Create a new CartoDB dataset. The default dataset comes with the following fields: {cartodb_id, the_geom, description, name} Each row represents one submission from the map with the first field a unique id assigned by CartoDB to each geometry. the_geom is the geographic object. description is the user input description of the shape, and name is the user's name.
  2. In the view for the table, click on the "SQL" tab on the write to execute arbitrary SQL.
    Custom SQL tab
  3. Copy and paste the contents of insert_function.sql (located here) into the sql pane, and then modify the name of the table to be inserted:
    _the_table TEXT := 'crowdmap_basic';
    
    This function allows you to send data from the map to the CartoDB using a publicly accessible URL while limiting what functions the public can perform on the data (for example, modifying or deleting existing data). This function takes the drawn shape as a GeoJSON, the description, and the username. It converts the GeoJSON to a PostGIS geometry object and then inserts a new row in the table with the geometry, and the other two user-input values. Since it isn't easy to view saved functions in cartoDB, I recommend saving the function in a text file.
    If you have multiple tables see below for more information on keeping track of multiple files.
  4. Return to step 2 in After Forking this Repository

Multiple tables: you need to create a unique function for each, it's probably a good idea to save each function as a separate file so you can recall what is on your CartoDB account. Alternatively you can see which functions have been created with the following sql query (source):

SELECT  proname, proargnames, prosrc 
FROM    pg_catalog.pg_namespace n
JOIN    pg_catalog.pg_proc p
ON      p.pronamespace = n.oid
WHERE   n.nspname = 'public' 
AND		p.proowner <> 10

Now What?

What to do and modify on your map once it's working. Have a look at the different parameters in the config variable in index.html to get a sense of what you can modify:

  • Where the map is focused on with the mapcenter parameter
  • The shapes that can be drawn (line, marker, etc...) under the drawOptions parameters. See more Leaflet.Draw options here
    • You can also enable editing and deleting of shapes, however this will require additional configuration of the function that communicates with the CartoDB database, see this CartoDB tutorial for more details. (Note: that CartoDB example may be vulnerable to SQL Injection, see here)
  • The base map (background) by modifying var CartoDB_Positron = L.tileLayer(...), you can test a number here
  • The map style (e.g. height, width, font) by modifying css/style.css. See this quirky frog-based tutorial as an introduction to Cascading Style Sheets
  • [Advanced] what fields are collected. This requires the modification of:
    • The table in CartoDB
    • The insert_function (and then re-executing this in CartoDB)
    • The field(s) used after <div id="dialog" title="Tell us About this Drawing"> in index.html
    • The setData() function in index.html

Once you've collected data from users, have a look at the tutorials at CartoDB for what kinds of maps you can make from your data.

How it works

Sending Leaflet.draw data to CartoDB

This section details the modifications made from the excellent tutorial by Mike Foster (@mjfoster83). If this is your first introduction to leaflet, you should probably go through the entire webmapping workshop

  1. Modify the setData() function to construct the SQL query which calls the function to insert the data to CartoDB.
     //Convert the drawing to a GeoJSON to pass to the CartoDB sql database
     var drawing = "'"+JSON.stringify(layer.toGeoJSON().geometry)+"'";
    
     //Construct the SQL query to insert data from the three parameters: the drawing, 
     //the input username, and the input description of the drawn shape
     var sql = "SELECT insert_crowd_mapping_data(";
     sql += drawing;
     sql += ","+enteredDescription;
     sql += ","+enteredUsername;
     sql += ");";
  2. And then add the sql query to an AJAX call in order to pass the data to your CartoDB table
    //TODO: Change to your username
    var cartoDBusername = "raphaeld"  
    //Sending the data
      $.ajax({
        type: 'POST',
        url: 'https://'+cartoDBusername+'.cartodb.com/api/v2/sql',
        crossDomain: true,
        data: {"q":sql},
        dataType: 'json',
        success: function(responseData, textStatus, jqXHR) {
          console.log("Data saved");
    
        },
        error: function (responseData, textStatus, errorThrown) {
    
            console.log("Problem saving the data");
        }
      });
  3. After each new drawing is inserted, the data from the drawnItems layer is passed to the CartoDBData layer without re-querying the database. This does mean that a user won't see others' edits to the map after load. See Mike Foster's tutorial for the easy fix to reload the data from CartoDB after every draw.
    // Transfer drawing to the CartoDB layer
    var newData = layer.toGeoJSON();
      newData.properties.description = description.value;
      newData.properties.name = username.value;
    
    cartoDBData.addData(newData);