A fork of django-geoposition.
A model field that can hold a geoposition (latitude/longitude), and corresponding admin/form widget.
Please use from version 0.3.4. Previous versions had several unsolved issues by their original maintainers. django-geoposition requires Django 1.8 or greater.
Use your favorite Python packaging tool to install
geopositionfrom PyPI, e.g.:pip install django-geoposition-2
Add
"geoposition"to yourINSTALLED_APPSsetting:INSTALLED_APPS = ( # … "geoposition", )If you want to use Google Maps, set your Google API key in your settings file:
GEOPOSITION_GOOGLE_MAPS_API_KEY = 'YOUR_API_KEY'
API keys may be obtained here: https://developers.google.com/maps/documentation/javascript/get-api-key
If you want to use OpenStreetMap, activate Leaflet backend in your settings file:
GEOPOSITION_BACKEND = 'leaflet'
As Leaflet is provider agnostic, you could use any other map provider from the following list: http://leaflet-extras.github.io/leaflet-providers/preview
django-geoposition comes with a model field that makes it pretty
easy to add a geoposition field to one of your models. To make use of
it:
In your
myapp/models.py:from django.db import models from geoposition.fields import GeopositionField class PointOfInterest(models.Model): name = models.CharField(max_length=100) position = GeopositionField()This enables the following simple API:
>>> from geoposition import Geoposition >>> from myapp.models import PointOfInterest >>> poi = PointOfInterest.objects.create(name='Foo', position=Geoposition(52.522906, 13.41156)) >>> poi.position Geoposition(52.522906,13.41156) >>> poi.position.latitude 52.522906 >>> poi.position.longitude 13.41156
If you use a GeopositionField in the admin it will automatically
show a Google Maps widget with a marker at the currently stored
position. You can drag and drop the marker with the mouse and the
corresponding latitude and longitude fields will be updated
accordingly.
It looks like this:
Using the map widget on a regular form outside of the admin requires just a little more work. In your template make sure that
- jQuery is included
- the static files (JS, CSS) of the map widget are included (just use
{{ form.media }})
Example:
<script src="//ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.8/jquery.min.js"></script>
<form method="POST" action="">{% csrf_token %}
{{ form.media }}
{{ form.as_p }}
</form>
You can customize the MapOptions and MarkerOptions used to initialize the
map and marker in JavaScript by defining GEOPOSITION_MAP_OPTIONS or
GEOPOSITION_MARKER_OPTIONS in your settings.py.
Example:
GEOPOSITION_MAP_OPTIONS = {
'minZoom': 3,
'maxZoom': 15,
'parentSelector': 'li.changeform-tabs-item',
'isDjangoAdmin': True
}
GEOPOSITION_MARKER_OPTIONS = {
'cursor': 'move'
}
Please note that you cannot use a value like new google.maps.LatLng(52.5,13.4)
for a setting like center or position because that would end up as a
string in the JavaScript code and not be evaluated. Please use
Lat/Lng Object Literals for that purpose, e.g. {'lat': 52.5, 'lng': 13.4}.
You can also customize the height of the displayed map widget by setting
GEOPOSITION_MAP_WIDGET_HEIGHT to an integer value (default is 480).
