Is there a way to limit panning out of the world's edge? On this picture, brown is the world, grey is emptiness. I want to make it impossible to pan like this.
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This is possible, check out this thread: stackoverflow.com/questions/17187161/…– chrkiMar 4, 2014 at 10:13
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1Thank you! But is it possible to make it not to go back after panning over limits, but to make it block panning when reaching limits?– TerionMar 4, 2014 at 13:45
3 Answers
Leaflet allows you to control how much the map resists being dragged out of bounds with the maxBoundsViscosity
option (value: 0 to 1). Setting it to maximum disables dragging out of bounds entirely.
var map = new L.Map('map', {
center: bounds.getCenter(),
zoom: 5,
layers: [osm],
maxBounds: bounds,
maxBoundsViscosity: 1.0
});
This feature is available in 1.0.0. The relevant pull request includes a working example:
var osmUrl = 'http://{s}.tile.openstreetmap.org/{z}/{x}/{y}.png',
osmAttrib = '© <a href="http://openstreetmap.org/copyright">OpenStreetMap</a> contributors',
osm1 = L.tileLayer(osmUrl, {
maxZoom: 18,
attribution: osmAttrib
}),
osm2 = L.tileLayer(osmUrl, {
maxZoom: 18,
attribution: osmAttrib
}),
bounds = new L.LatLngBounds(new L.LatLng(49.5, -11.3), new L.LatLng(61.2, 2.5));
var map1 = new L.Map('map1', {
center: bounds.getCenter(),
zoom: 5,
layers: [osm1],
maxBounds: bounds,
maxBoundsViscosity: 0.75
});
var map2 = new L.Map('map2', {
center: bounds.getCenter(),
zoom: 5,
layers: [osm2],
maxBounds: bounds,
maxBoundsViscosity: 1.0
});
var latlngs = L.rectangle(bounds).getLatLngs();
L.polyline(latlngs[0].concat(latlngs[0][0])).addTo(map1);
L.polyline(latlngs[0].concat(latlngs[0][0])).addTo(map2);
html,
body,
#map {
margin: 0;
padding: 0;
width: 100%;
height: 100%;
}
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://unpkg.com/leaflet@1.0.0/dist/leaflet.css" />
<script src="https://unpkg.com/leaflet@1.0.0/dist/leaflet.js"></script>
<h1>Left: Bouncy maxBounds. Right: Not bouncy.</h1>
<div id="map1" style="float: left; width:45%; height: 80%;"></div>
<div id="map2" style="float: left; width:45%; height: 80%;"></div>
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Is this option still working ? I am not able to do something similar with mapbox Jul 29, 2016 at 12:37
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@gsuresh92 Not for mapbox. At this point mapbox is using leaflet 0.7.7, but this feature is in 1.0-beta1 and later. Jul 29, 2016 at 14:29
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@catbadger Thanks. Looks like they refactored and moved that option. The debug example for that option no longer works though; I'll check to see if it's a regression or not. Sep 20, 2016 at 20:28
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@catbadger I was mistaken, looks like the debug example for rc3 still works. Is this what you expect? Sep 22, 2016 at 2:06
This is how I resolved it for the world map
var map = L.map('map').setView([51.505, -0.09], 3);
L.tileLayer('http://{s}.tile.osm.org/{z}/{x}/{y}.png').addTo(map);
var southWest = L.latLng(-89.98155760646617, -180),
northEast = L.latLng(89.99346179538875, 180);
var bounds = L.latLngBounds(southWest, northEast);
map.setMaxBounds(bounds);
map.on('drag', function() {
map.panInsideBounds(bounds, { animate: false });
});
See working example both for version .7.0.7 http://jsfiddle.net/exqar2w4/18/ and for version 1.0.3 http://jsfiddle.net/exqar2w4/20/
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2Thanks for the answer this worked great. Any reason for making the lats so specific? I tried this and it works even when
[ -90, -180 ]
Aug 15, 2018 at 17:10 -
1@hughjdavey dunno just got those coords when positioned the globe, but yeah 90 works too obviously– rob.mAug 20, 2018 at 10:53
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1
map.on('drag', function() { map.panInsideBounds(bounds, { animate: false }); });
. This is what I was looking for to stop the bounce effect. Thank you !– krisMar 16, 2020 at 4:40
I use react-leaflet
so syntax slightly different to above, but thought it would be helpful to show some sensible bounds to use (none of the answers above do that).
import Leaflet from 'leaflet'
import { Map as LeafletMap} from 'react-leaflet'
// Set map bounds.
// Allow scroll over the international date line, so users can comfortably zoom into locations near the date line.
const corner1 = Leaflet.latLng(-90, -200)
const corner2 = Leaflet.latLng(90, 200)
const bounds = Leaflet.latLngBounds(corner1, corner2)
Which is then rendered as...
<LeafletMap
maxBoundsViscosity={1.0}
maxBounds={bounds}
{...otherProps}
>