Skip to content

elsa-huang/fgpv-vpgf

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

RAMP2

This project is now a monorepo and contains the following repos under the packages folder:

Building the project

Install Rush if you don't already have it:

$ npm install -g @microsoft/rush

Clone the repo and use Rush to install dependencies

$ rush update

You might want to run rush update -p --full to cleanly re-install all the dependencies (-p will purge what is currently there)

Serve the project:

$ rush serve -p 10 -v
  • -p 10 specifies the maximum number of concurrent processes to run (we need 8 right now to serve all the packages at the same time)
  • -v provides verbose output for debugging

If you want to work on only a subset of packages instead you have to run their builds/serves seperately:

// terminal 0
$ cd packages/ramp-core
$ npm run serve

// terminal 1
$ cd packages/ramp-plugin-enhanced-table
$ npm run serve

Lastly open the samples page:

http://localhost:6001/samples/index-samples.html
etc.

For more rush commands or general reading: https://rushjs.io/pages/intro/welcome/

For more info on individual packages builds/documentation read the READMEs in the respective folder.

Documentation

The Reusable Accessible Mapping Platform (RAMP), also known as the Federal Geospatial Platform Visualiser (FGPV), is a Javascript based web mapping platform that provides a reusable, WCAG 2.0 AA compliant common viewer platform for the Government of Canada.

For more information on this project, please see one of the sections below:

Also, please visit the Documentation Site for additional content on:

Usage

Quick guide

We'll go through the simplest way to use RAMP, for more information see the map author guide

First, grab the most recent release from the github releases Place the files rv-main.js and rv-styles.css within your webpage's folder structure. We usually put our JavaScript files under a js folder and our stylesheets under a css folder.

Then you want to include those files on your page, along with jQuery and the needed polyfills (again, more info at the map author guide):

  1. Within head
<link rel="stylesheet" href="../../../rv-styles.css" />
  1. Near the end of the body
<script src="https://code.jquery.com/jquery-2.2.4.min.js" integrity="sha256-BbhdlvQf/xTY9gja0Dq3HiwQF8LaCRTXxZKRutelT44=" crossorigin="anonymous"></script>
<script src="https://cdn.polyfill.io/v2/polyfill.min.js?features=default,Object.entries,Object.values,Array.prototype.find,Array.prototype.findIndex,Array.prototype.values,Array.prototype.includes,HTMLCanvasElement.prototype.toBlob,String.prototype.repeat,String.prototype.codePointAt,String.fromCodePoint,NodeList.prototype.@@iterator,Promise,Promise.prototype.finally"></script>
<script src="/js/rv-main.js"></script>

Now that you have the required files on your page we should add the map element.

<div is="rv-map" style="height: 100%; display:flex;" rv-langs='["en-CA", "fr-CA"]'></div>

A map should now load on your page. Theres much more you can do with RAMP, a good place to start (I'm mentioning it again!) is the map author guide

Support

How we provide support

For more information on contributing read the Contributing Guide. Note there may be some references to the pre-monorepo setup, pull requests are now only needed in one place (this repo).

About

RAMP2 FGP Visualiser / Visualisateur pour la PGF PCAR2

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 58.2%
  • TypeScript 11.5%
  • HTML 10.3%
  • SCSS 8.7%
  • Smarty 6.9%
  • CSS 3.0%
  • Other 1.4%