Marble/Runners/LoadingKML: Difference between revisions

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== Loading KML files into a Marble Widget ==
== Loading KML files into a Marble Widget ==


Marble uses so-called runners to calculate routes, do reverse geocoding, parse files and search for placemarks (cities, addresses, points of interest, ...). This tutorial shows how to use the <tt>[http://api.kde.org/4.x-api/kdeedu-apidocs/marble/html/classMarble_1_1MarbleRunnerManager.html MarbleRunnerManager]</tt> class to open a .kml (or .gpx, .osm, ...) file and display it into the Marble Widget.  
Marble uses so-called runners to calculate routes, do reverse geocoding, parse files and search for placemarks (cities, addresses, points of interest, ...). This tutorial shows how to open a .kml (or .gpx, .osm, ...) file and display it into the Marble Widget.  


<source lang="cpp-qt">
<source lang="cpp-qt">
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#include <QtCore/QFileInfo>
#include <QtCore/QFileInfo>
#include <QtGui/QApplication>
#include <QtGui/QApplication>
#include <QtGui/QTreeView>
   
   
#include <marble/MarbleWidget.h>
#include <marble/MarbleWidget.h>
#include <marble/MarbleModel.h>
#include <marble/MarbleModel.h>
#include <marble/MarbleRunnerManager.h>
#include <marble/GeoDataTreeModel.h>
   
   
using namespace Marble;
using namespace Marble;
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         return 1;
         return 1;
     }
     }
 
    MarbleModel *model = new MarbleModel;
    MarbleRunnerManager* manager = new MarbleRunnerManager( model->pluginManager() );
    GeoDataDocument* document = manager->openFile( inputFile.absoluteFilePath() );
 
     MarbleWidget *mapWidget = new MarbleWidget();
     MarbleWidget *mapWidget = new MarbleWidget();
     mapWidget->setMapThemeId("earth/openstreetmap/openstreetmap.dgml");
     mapWidget->setMapThemeId("earth/openstreetmap/openstreetmap.dgml");


     if ( document ) {
     mapWidget->centerOn( GeoDataCoordinates( 26.0783, 44.4671, 0, GeoDataCoordinates::Degree ) );
mapWidget->model()->treeModel()->addDocument( document );
    mapWidget->zoomView( 2200 );
mapWidget->centerOn( GeoDataCoordinates( 26.0783, 44.4671, 0, GeoDataCoordinates::Degree ) );
 
mapWidget->zoomView( 2200 );
    mapWidget->model()->addGeoDataFile( inputFile.absoluteFilePath() );
mapWidget->show();
    mapWidget->show();
    } else {
        qDebug() << "Unable to open " << inputFile.absoluteFilePath();
    }
   
   
     return app.exec();
     return app.exec();
}
}</source>
</source>


Copy and paste the code above into a text editor. Then save it as <tt>my_marble.cpp</tt> and compile it by entering the following command on the command line:
Copy and paste the code above into a text editor. Then save it as <tt>my_marble.cpp</tt> and compile it by entering the following command on the command line:
Line 67: Line 53:
</source>
</source>


If things go fine, execute <tt>./my_marble some-file.kml</tt> and you get a Marble Widget which displays your KML file. For example, download [http://paste.kde.org/504242/ bucharest.kml] (a [http://api.kde.org/4.x-api/kdeedu-apidocs/marble/html/classMarble_1_1GeoDataLinearRing.html LinearRing] representing Bucharest's city boundaries), place it in the same folder as your <tt>my_marble.cpp</tt> file and run <tt>./my_marble bucharest.kml</tt>. The result should be similar to this:  
If things go fine, execute <tt>./my_marble some-file.kml</tt> and you get a Marble Widget which displays your KML file. For example, download and unpack [http://techbase.kde.org/images.techbase/b/bd/Bucharest.kml.gz Bucharest.kml] (a [http://api.kde.org/4.x-api/kdeedu-apidocs/marble/html/classMarble_1_1GeoDataLinearRing.html LinearRing] representing Bucharest's city boundaries), place it in the same folder as your <tt>my_marble.cpp</tt> file and run <tt>./my_marble bucharest.kml</tt>. The result should be similar to this:  


[[Image:LoadKML.png]]
[[Image:LoadKML.png]]
{{
note|
The same method works for loading other file types too, like OpenStreetMap (.osm), GPX and Shapefiles (.shp).
}}





Latest revision as of 21:01, 10 March 2016

Search
Tutorial Series   Marble C++ Tutorial
Previous   Tutorial 3 - Basic Interactions with MarbleWidget
What's Next   Tutorial 5 - Loading OSM files into MarbleWidget
Further Reading   n/a

Loading KML files into a Marble Widget

Marble uses so-called runners to calculate routes, do reverse geocoding, parse files and search for placemarks (cities, addresses, points of interest, ...). This tutorial shows how to open a .kml (or .gpx, .osm, ...) file and display it into the Marble Widget.

#include <QtCore/QDebug>
#include <QtCore/QFileInfo>
#include <QtGui/QApplication>
 
#include <marble/MarbleWidget.h>
#include <marble/MarbleModel.h>
 
using namespace Marble;
 
int main(int argc, char** argv)
{
    QApplication app(argc,argv);
 
    QFileInfo inputFile( app.arguments().last() );
    if ( app.arguments().size() < 2 || !inputFile.exists() ) {
        qWarning() << "Usage: " << app.arguments().first() << "file.kml";
        return 1;
    }
  
    MarbleWidget *mapWidget = new MarbleWidget();
    mapWidget->setMapThemeId("earth/openstreetmap/openstreetmap.dgml");

    mapWidget->centerOn( GeoDataCoordinates( 26.0783, 44.4671, 0, GeoDataCoordinates::Degree ) );
    mapWidget->zoomView( 2200 );

    mapWidget->model()->addGeoDataFile( inputFile.absoluteFilePath() );
	
    mapWidget->show();
 
    return app.exec();
}

Copy and paste the code above into a text editor. Then save it as my_marble.cpp and compile it by entering the following command on the command line:

 g++ -I /usr/include/qt4/ -o my_marble my_marble.cpp -lmarblewidget -lQtGui -lQtCore

If things go fine, execute ./my_marble some-file.kml and you get a Marble Widget which displays your KML file. For example, download and unpack Bucharest.kml (a LinearRing representing Bucharest's city boundaries), place it in the same folder as your my_marble.cpp file and run ./my_marble bucharest.kml. The result should be similar to this:

Note
The same method works for loading other file types too, like OpenStreetMap (.osm), GPX and Shapefiles (.shp).


Note
If you provide maps in your application please check the Terms of Use of the map material. The map material that is shipped with Marble is licensed in the spirit of Free Software. This usually means at least that the authors should be credited and that the license is mentioned. E.g. for OpenStreetMap the license is CC-BY-SA. Other map data shipped with Marble is either public domain or licensed in the spirit of the BSD license.