@adamsteer @scott
Qgis2web is a great plugin for creating slippymaps using either Leaflet or OpenLayers.
#QGIS2Web

figured out a few upgrades to my walks map: Changing colour on hover is an obvious one as I keep doing walks that overlap and are the same length, so there's no colour difference.

I also added an image field to the Named Stones layer, so now I can just correctly name a picture of the stone and drop it into the folder and it will pop up on the layer. Points without images show a broken icon though. I should probably set the image popup size too..

https://sarahdal.github.io/Walks/

#QGIS #QGIS2Web

Northumberland Walks

@robintw The correct answer is #qgis2web.
Ironman 2024: Die unglaublichen Strecken auf Hawaii | #geoObserver

Pleasure to be involved with the Railway Land Wildlife Trust #mapping the new habitats being created in #Lewes by local people/partners for the Mosaic project https://lnkd.in/g-jHMT3D.
Window boxes for pollinators, tree planting, swift boxes.
If you live in Lewes get involved & spread the word.
I've also used my cartographic licence to produce a 'mosaic' of the mosaic. Looking forward to seeing some interesting
patterns emerging during the project.
#gis #qgis #qgis2web #cartography
#geospatial
LinkedIn

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And until I get a #qgis2web workflow going with interactive slippy maps, here's a zoomed version towards downtown. It ranks new connections in the dense downtown higher, which makes sense. Shorter connections between the existing network tend to rank higher. What's sort of imperfect but expected is that sometimes one block ranks higher than the block next to it. It could use some "smoothing" to even out the ranks of coordinators. Next, I'll share more of the method to create this. #minneapolis🧡

Since Andrea took over management and development of #qgis2web, I've not kept so much of an eye on it. That means I missed the most amazing milestone:

QGIS2WEB HAS NOW BEEN DOWNLOADED OVER A MILLION TIMES

I'm so pleased Andrea has given the plugin such a new lease of life. He is ploughing a huge amount of time, effort, and expertise into it, and it's wonderful to see new releases coming and coming.

@tomchadwin Thanks for mentioning. We have now a slightly improved version published: https://plugins.qgis.org/plugins/QuickWebViewer/

Still a long way to go to make it that smooth and fine-grained as #qgis2web, but it's a start to build a solution for low tech requirements and heavy maps suitable for the cheapest servers on the market. It's thought to fill the gap between your plugin and #QGISServer

Have a look at first examples we published using the plugin: https://censo2021.quickwebviewer.org/ and https://urba-conakry.quickwebviewer.org/

QuickWebViewer β€” QGIS Python Plugins Repository

Very interesting new QGIS plugin, to sit alongside #qgis2web. QuickWebViewer exports QGIS projects to MapLibre: https://gitlab.com/300000-kms/QuickWebViewer #OneToWatch #webmapping
300000kms_gerald / QuickWebViewer Β· GitLab

QGIS Plugin

GitLab

I cannot tell you how happy I am that Andrea has just developed and released v 3.19.0 of #qgis2web, in which AT LAST layer groups are properly supported. This is the single biggest longstanding issue which affected the plugin, and it's a huge step forward. Thanks, Andrea!

https://github.com/qgis2web/qgis2web/releases/tag/v3.19.0

Release v3.19.0 Β· qgis2web/qgis2web

qgis2web supports layer groups Exporting layer groups both OpenLayers and Leaflet exports achieve layer groups (non-nested) exportability solves issue #155 #175 #351 #485 #641 #678 #738 #754 #756 ...

GitHub