Marble/MarblePythonMarbleWidget: Difference between revisions

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class main():
def main():
     app = QApplication(sys.argv)
     app = QApplication(sys.argv)



Revision as of 14:58, 27 December 2013

MarbleWidget: Changing basic map properties
Tutorial Series   Marble Python Tutorial
Previous   Tutorial 1 - Hello World
What's Next   Tutorial 3 - Basic Interaction with MarbleWidget
Further Reading   n/a


Creating a weather map

We'd like to display a small weather map. So we need to modify the map. And we need to turn on the satellite view, enable the clouds and enable the country border lines.

The MarbleWidget class provides a convenient way to make these changes to the overall look and feel of the map. The documentation for this class can be found in the marble source at src/bindings/python/html/marble/Marble.html.

By default Marble shows a few info boxes: Overview Map, Compass and ScaleBar. But the size for the widget is very limited. Therefore we want to get rid of all the clutter, so we turn off the Overview Map and the ScaleBar.

#!/usr/bin/env python
from PyQt4.QtCore import *
from PyQt4.QtGui import *
from PyKDE4.marble import *
import sys


def main():
    app = QApplication(sys.argv)

    # create the marble widget
    marble = Marble.MarbleWidget()

    # resize the widget and add a window title
    marble.resize(600, 400)
    marble.setWindowTitle("Marble Weather Map")

    # Load the OpenStreetMap map
    marble.setMapThemeId("earth/bluemarble/bluemarble.dgml")

    # make the map flat, not spherical
    marble.setProjection(Marble.Mercator)

    # zoom in further
    marble.setZoom(1300)

    # Enable the cloud cover and enable the country borders
    marble.setShowClouds(True)
    marble.setShowBorders(True)

    # Hide the FloatItems: Compass and StatusBar
    marble.setShowOverviewMap(False)
    marble.setShowScaleBar(False)

    # add the widget to the KMainWindow
    marble.show()

    # run the app
    app.exec_()

main()

Save the code above as marble_weather.py and run it:

python marble_weather.py

If things go fine, you end up with a map application that displays clouds on top of a flat map with clouds over it (you may need to zoom out):