4

Consider the following code:

heatmap = new OpenLayers.Layer.Heatmap( "Heatmap Layer", map, osm,
{visible: true, radius: radiusForScale[zoom], legend: {position: 'br',title: 'title'}}, 
{isBaseLayer: false, opacity: 0.3, projection: new OpenLayers.Projection("EPSG:4326")}
);

Background: heatmap.js is great for displaying population densities and such... however, I do not want heatmap.js to control the radius of my points. Instead, I wish to dynamically updated the radius based on a custom zoom function I have created, without having to destroy the heatmap and recreate it every time the zoom changes. Now, this is possible if you add the heatmap to a div as follows:

var config = {
    element: document.getElementById("heatmapArea"),
    radius: 30,
    opacity: 50
};

//creates and initializes the heatmap
var heatmap = h337.create(config);

In this example, it's as simple as updating the JSON object and updating the display. However, this in only a static display assigned to a div, and therefore renders the vector layer useless. Has anyone had any success with this in OpenLayers??

On a side note: I've browsed through all the keys in the heatmap JSON string and there doesn't seem to be a way to change the zoom variable.

1
  • NOTE: This is NOT using the heatmap functionality of OL3. It's the library created by Patrick Wied.
    – Brett
    Apr 24, 2014 at 16:36

1 Answer 1

3

Figured it out... this isn't advertised in the documentation or anywhere on the internet that I could find.. however, here's how you control the radius in OpenLayers for those of you who need it. Let's keep it simple..

// create our heatmap layer
var heatmap = new OpenLayers.Layer.Heatmap( 
"Heatmap Layer", map, osm, {visible: true, radius:50}, 
{isBaseLayer: false, opacity: 0.3, projection: new OpenLayers.Projection("EPSG:4326")}
);
map.addLayers([heatmap]);

Now add the data:

heatmap.setDataSet(data);

Here's the key. You can do pretty much anything with this list of commands:

this.set("radius",value); //****this one solved my problem
this.set("element",value);
this.set("visible",value); //deceiving! You have to access the canvas subclass to get it to work
this.set("max",value);
this.set("gradient",value);
this.set("opacity",value);
this.set("width",value);
this.set("height",value);
this.set("debug",value);

So, for example, create a zoom event so the radius changes based on your radius function. For me, it was as simple as scaling the radius based on the ratio screen width(pixels)/screen width(meters). So now in your click event:

on zoom change: //pseudocode
canvas = heatmap.heatmap.get('canvas'); //this is the subclass I spoke of above
if the zoom is above a certain value //pseudocode
then
canvas.style.display = 'block'; //show the heatmap... you can also use heatmap.toggle() but this gives you more control
heatmap.heatmap.set('radius',zoomfunction[map.zoom]); //this dynamically updates the radius!!
heatmap.updateLayer();
else
canvas.style.display = 'none';
heatmap.updateLayer();

I hope this helps someone 'cause it drove me crazy!

10
  • This doesn't work. The radius doesn't change, even though it accepted the change. The problem is that the style is created when the heatmap layer is initialized. I might have to recreate the heatmap.
    – Nick
    Apr 18, 2014 at 22:33
  • Are you sure you're updating the layer? This works just fine for me.
    – Brett
    Apr 21, 2014 at 19:58
  • I'm updating the attributes of the heatmap layer. Looking at the code, there's no way this will work. I'm curious how this is working for you. I'll try to post a fiddle when I get a chance. In the ol.layer.Heatmap constructor in ol3js.org/en/master/build/ol-whitespace.js, take a look at setStyle - the icon references a circle (search for 'src:circle') which is defined above it and there's no way to change it dynamically once the style has been defined.... any thoughts?
    – Nick
    Apr 22, 2014 at 17:05
  • Nick, I hope I'm understanding you correctly. The current heatmap library dynamically adjusts the radius and the colors as you zoom in, which doesn't give you a realistic representation of certain things. For my example, I wanted to show received signal strength from a transmitter. So, my goal was to keep the colors and the radius as I zoomed in. Is this what you're trying to do? P.S. I'm new to stackoverflow... how do I post a large amount of code beyond the character limit? Perhaps I can just email the answer, but I'd like to share it here.
    – Brett
    Apr 22, 2014 at 18:32
  • It would be nice to see what you're doing. From what I see in code, OL & Heatmap integration is quite limited. Can you post a working solution on JSFiddle? That's what is used for code sharing html/js/css mostly.
    – Nick
    Apr 22, 2014 at 22:07

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