JavaScript Toolkit for Rich Web Mapping Applications.
GeoExt is Open Source and enables building desktop-like GIS applications through the web. It is a JavaScript framework that combines the GIS functionality of OpenLayers with the user interface savvy of the ExtJS library provided by Sencha.
Version 2 of GeoExt is the successor to the GeoExt 1.x-series and is built atop the newest official installments of its base libraries; OpenLayers 2.13.1 and ExtJS 4.2.1.
Have a look at the official homepage: http://geoext.github.io/geoext2/
You will find examples, API documentation (with and without inherited functionality from ExtJS), links to mailinglists and more over there.
What you see on http://geoext.github.io/geoext2/ are the contents of the
gh-pages
-branch. If you encounter anything that should be fixed, please issue
a pull request against that branch and we will merge it as soon as possible.
Hey that's a good decision, and it is very easy to get started on a page that already includes ExtJS and OpenLayers:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Trying out GeoExt2</title>
<!-- Load the ExtJS stylesheet -->
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"
href="http://cdn.sencha.com/ext/gpl/4.2.1/resources/css/ext-all.css">
<!-- Load ExtJS from their CDN, local versions work also -->
<script type="text/javascript"
src="http://cdn.sencha.com/ext/gpl/4.2.1/ext-debug.js"></script>
<!-- Load OpenLayers, custom builds may even be better -->
<script src="http://openlayers.org/api/2.13.1/OpenLayers.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript" src="../loader.js"></script>
</head>
<body></body>
</html>
Next, we simply add a <script>
-tag in which we tell ExtJS about GeoExt (and
also where to find the ExtJS source files):
<script type="text/javascript">
Ext.Loader.setConfig({
enabled: true,
disableCaching: false,
paths: {
GeoExt: "path/to/src/GeoExt",
Ext: "http://cdn.sencha.com/ext/gpl/4.2.1/src"
}
});
</script>
That's it. Now you can e.g. create a very basic mappanel and let it reign over the whole browser window:
var mappanel = Ext.create('GeoExt.panel.Map', {
title: 'A sample Map',
map: {
// ...
// optional, can be either
// - a valid OpenLayers.Map configuration or
// - an instance of OpenLayers.Map
},
center: '12.31,51.48',
zoom: 6
});
Ext.create('Ext.container.Viewport', {
layout: 'fit',
items: [
mappanel // our variable from above
]
});
More information to get started can be grabbed on the main website.
We definitely want you to help us making GeoExt. We will happily accept pull requests of any kind; be it documentation improvement, code refactoring or new functionality.
Please sign the contributor agreement
and email it to the GeoExt Project Steering Committee (psc [at] geoext.org
)
prior to submitting your changes. Thanks.
- Install jsduck: https://github.com/senchalabs/jsduck
- Run
jsduck --config jsduck.json
in the root of the repository - Optional: If you want the documentation for ExtJS to be linked, edit
jsduck.json
to point to the proper source location (URLs will not work) - Optional: To refresh screenshots in the example page run
~$ . tools/screenshots.sh http://geoext.github.io/geoext2/examples/
- Open the generated file
/path/to/your/geoext/docs/index.html
in your favorite browser - Enjoy!
-
Serve the contents of a GeoExt 2 clone on a webserver, e.g.:
user@machine:/src/geoext2 $ python -m SimpleHTTPServer 2222
-
Open the main test suite HTML file in a browser:
http://localhost:2222/tests/run-tests.html
-
Click the button "run all"
You can also run the above tests headlessly through casperjs:
# Run the suite in the root of the repository
./tests/headless/casperjs-1.1-beta.1/bin/casperjs \
test \
tests/headless/run-testsuite.js
These tests are also run though travis.