|
HTML DISPLAY DRIVERHTML display driver to create HTML image maps.DESCRIPTIONThe HTML driver allows the generation of HTML image maps for area vector data. HTML image maps are used in conjunction with images to provide unique URL targets for different portions of an image. The HTML driver can create both client-side image maps embedded into HTML files, or server-side image maps used by web server software.Polygons can at most have 100 vertices (this limit imposed by HTML image map formats, see GRASS_RENDER_HTMLMAXPOINTS below.) The driver will attempt to trim polygons that have more that 100 vertices by removing vertices with the least amount of angle to the next vertice. Also, any polygon that is entirely bounded by another polygon will be discarded. Text written to the driver before polygons are used as the HREF tag for all subsequent polygons written. All polygons that exist in a vector map will have the same HREF tag. The only GRASS display commands that should be used with this driver are:
USAGEEnvironment variablesThe HTML driver can be enabled by setting GRASS_RENDER_IMMEDIATE variable, eg.export GRASS_RENDER_IMMEDIATE=htmlSeveral environment variables affect the operation of the HTML driver:
ExampleStart up the driverg.region vector=zipcodes_wake d.mon start=htmlDisplay text strings (HREF’s) and polygons echo "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raleigh,_North_Carolina" | d.text d.vect map=zipcodes_wake where="ZIPNAME = ’RALEIGH’" echo "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cary,_North_Carolina" | d.text d.vect map=zipcodes_wake where="ZIPNAME = ’CARY’" fill_color=180:200:210Stop the driver once all polygon have been displayed. This will create a file named ’htmlmap’ in your current directory: d.mon stop=htmlYou will also want to create an image for your image map. Use the PNG driver and other utilities to create .gif or .jpg files. The following example is somewhat out of date and refers to options available in GRASS 5. # using previous GRASS_RENDER_WIDTH & GRASS_RENDER_HEIGHT d.mon start=png d.rast map=terrain d.vect map=area51 fillcolor=white linecolor=blue d.vect map=roswell fillcolor=yellow linecolor=blue d.vect map=states color=green d.vect map=roads color=black d.mon stop=png # make the region the same as the newly created cell for ppm export g.region save=saved.reg g.region raster=D_cell r.out.ppm -q input=D_cell output=alien.ppm # use the netpbm utilities to create a gif (quantize if needed) ppmquant 128 <alien.ppm | ppmtogif >alien.gif # assemble some html with the image and the image map echo ’<html><body><img src="alien.gif" usemap="#map">’ >alien.html cat htmlmap >>alien.html echo ’</body></html>’ >>alien.html # don’t forget to reset your region g.region region=saved.reg # take a look and test it out netscape file:`pwd`/alien.html & NOTESHTML was adapted from the CELL driver in GRASS 4.3. Point-in-polygon test code was lifted from Randolph Franklin’s web page, see
If you create an HTML file with two or more images and image maps,
you will need to edit the map names. The HTML driver creates its map with
the name map. A small sed script can easily change the map name:
sed -e ’s/NAME="map"/NAME="foomap"/’ < htmlmap > foomap.html SEE ALSOCairo driver, PNG driver, HTML driver, variablesd.rast, d.vect, d.mon, d.erase, d.redraw Main index | Topics index | Keywords index | Graphical index | Full index © 2003-2021 GRASS Development Team, GRASS GIS 7.8.6 Reference Manual
Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface. |