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Mapbox-Choropleth

Creates choropleth layers for Mapbox-GL-JS maps. A choropleth (sometimes called a heatmap) is a type of data visualisation where polygons (typically administrative boundaries such as states) are coloured to represent a numeric quantity (such as population).

This library combines a CSV file and a boundary source (GeoJSON or Mapbox vector tiles) to create a fill layer in your Mapbox-GL-JS map.

It uses:

Usage with NPM

Install:

npm install mapbox-choropleth
const MapboxChoropleth = require('mapbox-choropleth');

let c = new MapboxChoropleth({ options }).addTo(map);

Usage in <script> tag

<script src="https://unpkg.com/mapbox-choropleth"></script>
...
<script>
    let c = new MapboxChoropleth({ options }).addTo(map);
    ...
</script>

Required options

    // ONE of tableUrl OR tableRows is required.
    // URL of a CSV file that contains your table data.
    tableUrl:   'http://example.com/table.csv',

    // CSV rows in the format D3 produces.
    //tableRows: [{ id: 'VIC', pop: 5000000}, { id: 'SA', pop: 3000000 }, ...],

    // Name of the column in the CSV file that contains the numeric quantity to be visualised.
    // Values will be coerced to numbers, so may contain numeric strings ("3.5").
    tableNumericField: 'pop',

    // Name of the column in the CSV file that contains boundary identifiers
    tableIdField: 'id',

    // ONE of geometryUrl OR geometryTiles is required.
    // Either a mapbox:// vector tile URL, or a URL of a GeoJSON file containing the boundary geometry.
    geometryUrl: 'https://example.com/state-boundaries.geojson',

    // Array of vector tile endpoints, if you have non-mapbox-hosted vector tiles.
    //geometryTiles: [ 'https://example.com/tiles/states/{z}/{x}/{y}.pbf' ],

    // Name of the attribute in the CSV file that contains the same boundary identifiers as tableIdField
    geometryIdField: 'state_id',

    // alternatively, you can use each feature ID to match on. Only works for numeric fields.
    // useFeatureId: true

    // We can use `setFeatureState` to set values rather than a long style. Requires `useFeatureId`
    // useFeatureState: true

    // If using a vector tile source, the source layer to use.
    //sourceLayer: 'states'

Optional options


    // Number of distinct colour bins to use.
    binCount: 7

    // Any color scheme identifier accepted by [chroma.scale()](https://gka.github.io/chroma.js/#chroma-scale), including
    // [Color Brewer](http://colorbrewer2.org/) names ("BuGn", "Spectral") and arrays (['blue', 'white', 'red']).
    colorScheme: 'BuGn',

    // A DOM element or selector ("#legend") which will be populated with a legend.
    legendElement: '#legend',

    // Object, Mapbox style "paint" options (for "fill" layer)
    paint: { 'fill-opacity': 0.5 },

    // String to use as the Mapbox source ID, instead of 'choropleth'
    sourceId: 'mychoropleth',

    // String to use as the Mapbox layer ID, instead of 'choropleth'
    layerId: 'mychoropleth',

    // Insert the choropleth layer before this layer ID
    before: 'labels',

    // Function to format bin values for legend
    numberFormatFunc: x => x.toFixed(2),

    // additional source properties to set, as defined in the Mapbox source
    source: {
        maxzoom: 13
    },

    immediate: true, // Adds layer immediately, rather than trying to wait till the map is ready. Defaults to false.

    // Cast values in CSV to string or number to make them
    // geometryIdFieldType: String, // or Number, or undefined.

Example

const MapboxChoropleth = require('mapbox-choropleth');
let c = new MapboxChoropleth({
    tableUrl: 'https://gist.githubusercontent.com/stevage/088fd8edab66157e1a307f521e38ecca/raw/46d01d54a7d95cac1ad88347aa910b5de3946b3e/elb.csv',
    tableNumericField: 'Australian Labor Party Percentage',
    tableIdField: 'DivisionNm',
    geometryUrl: 'mapbox://stevage.7ux6xzbz',
    geometryIdField: 'ELECT_DIV',
    sourceLayer: 'ELB',
    binCount: 20,
    colorScheme: 'Spectral',
    legendElement: '#legend'
 }).addTo(map);

Using the legend

The generated legend is contains fairly basic styling. CSS classes are added before any other styles, to make them easy to override. You may want to add styles for these classes:

You'll need to add your own positioning styles for the legend element itself. For instance:

#legend {
    position: absolute;
    top: 1em;
    left: 1em;
}

You can obtain the legend HTML directly by calling choropleth.getLegend().

Credits

Author: Steve Bennett