This program is a slippy map tile generator for use with QGIS. All rendering is done by QGIS so what you see on your screen is what you'll get in your output tiles. Functionally it is quite similar to the QTiles plugin.
- Renders the map a section at time. This allows even very large datasets to be rendered.
- Renders each zoom level separately. This means that scale-dependant feature visibility is honored.
- Does not exhibit the rendering issues that QTiles has at tile edges:
- Does not truncate point icons
- Labels don't shift
- Patterned lines display correctly
- Fast: 20 minutes to render a complex 60km x 70km topographic map with roads, water, POIs, etc. from levels 5 through 15 on a 3.5GHz i7.
- Resistant to the QGIS bug that causes raster layers to sometimes not be displayed.
- Copious progress status display
- Simple Python script that can be easily modified to suit your needs.
- No graphical interface.
- Cannot be made to stop early without killing QGIS.
- Rendering complex maps causes the QGIS GUI to temporarily freeze during some parts of the rendering process.
- Lacks some of the additional options that QTiles offers.
- Doesn't always clip the rendering to the specified area of interest. At lower zoom levels tiles will be rendered that are not within the area of interest.
- Might not work under QGIS 3.x. This program has been tested under QGIS 2.x. Reports indicate that it does not function on the 3.x series.
Comments are welcome, you can email [email protected] (remove the type of map to get the real address).
readme.txt | This file |
tile_writer.py | The main script |
globalmercator.py | For latitude/longitude to tile coordinate conversions (Taken from GDAL2Tiles) |
scales.xml | Scale presets for QGIS matching the tile zoom levels |
LICENSE | License for this software |
- Create your map in QGIS
- If you are using scale-dependant feature visibility see the section "Zoom levels" below
- Place
tile_writer.py
andglobalmercator.py
into the same directory
(As packaged, this has already been done) - In QGIS, open the Python console (
Plugins
→Python Console
) - Click on the
Show editor
icon in the Python Console (middle icon) - Load the
tile_writer.py
script using theOpen file
icon (top icon on the right) - Define the map's area of interest:
- Create a new polygon vector layer
- Make it editable
- Add a polygon covering the area you want rendered
- Save it to disk; the filename you chose should be put into the
area_of_interest
variable in the script. - Hide the layer
- Adjust the settings to suit your needs (see below).
- Note that all paths and filenames are relative to QGIS's current working directory.
- If you run QGIS from the commandline then the directory you started it from is the working directory.
- If you run QGIS from a graphical interface under Unix/Linux then the working directory is probably your home directory.
- If you run QGIS under Windows drop me an email and let me know what QGIS's working directory is :^)
- Run the script using the
Run script
icon (the bottom icon) - The script's progress will appear in the console
- An
All done
message will be printed when the script has finished
Note that QGIS may appear to have locked up while generating the regional tiles. If this happens simply be patient; complex maps may take several minutes to draw.
The script will avoid regenerating images whenever possible. This means that
if you want to regenerate a map you should either specify a different
output_path or first delete all of the tile directories (numbered) as well as
the region tiles (e.g. "10_300_651_s16_b2.png"
).
These are found near the top of tile_writer.py
and should be changed as
appropriate before running the script.
Default value: 10
Default value: 15
(the actual number of map tiles per regional tile is step * step
)
Higher number speed up rendering (assuming enough RAM is available).
Lower numbers decrease memory usage but increase rendering time.
Default value: 16
By rendering extra, unused border tiles we can avoid shifting labels,
truncated images, and line-drawing inconsistancies at tile boundaries.
If this value is set to 0
you will encounter rendering issues at tile
boundaries.
Default value: 2
Default value: '.'
The extent of the shapefile is used to limit rendering to a particular area.
Note that no clipping is done so at lower zoom levels tiles from outside the
area of interest will be generated.
Default value: 'border.shp'
Can be set to either 'tms'
or 'google'
Default value: 'tms'
If you are using scale-dependant feature visibility you should use the scales
listed below when deciding visibility.
These scales can be found in the scales.xml
file and installed in QGIS using:
Settings
→ Options
→ Map Tools
→ Predefined Scales
→ Import from file
(folder icon)
Level | Scale |
---|---|
1 | 1 : 295,829,355.45 |
2 | 1 : 147,914,677.73 |
3 | 1 : 73,957,338.86 |
4 | 1 : 36,978,669.43 |
5 | 1 : 18,489,334.72 |
6 | 1 : 9,244,667.36 |
7 | 1 : 4,622,333.68 |
8 | 1 : 2,311,166.84 |
9 | 1 : 1,155,583.42 |
10 | 1 : 577,791.71 |
11 | 1 : 288,895.85 |
12 | 1 : 144,447.93 |
13 | 1 : 72,223.96 |
14 | 1 : 36,111.98 |
15 | 1 : 18,055.99 |
16 | 1 : 9,028.00 |
17 | 1 : 4,514.00 |
18 | 1 : 2,257.00 |
19 | 1 : 1,128.50 |
20 | 1 : 564.25 |
21 | 1 : 282.12 |
22 | 1 : 141.06 |
23 | 1 : 70.53 |
v0.2.2 | Clarified license, Documentation updates and corrections, Added Github repository (no code changes) |
v0.2.1 | Documentation updates, added scale presets file (no code changes) |
v0.2 | Now supports both TMS and Google naming conventions |
v0.1 | Initial release |
Email: | [email protected] |
(remove the type of map to get the real address) | |
Website: | http://alephnull.net/software/gis/tile_writer.shtml |
Github: | https://github.com/Alex-Kent/tile_writer |
tile_writer
Version 0.2.2 2018-11-09
© 2018 Alexander Hajnal All rights reserved
This software is released under the terms of the Version 3 of the GNU Affero
General Public License. See the LICENSE
file for details. Contact me via
email to negotiate licensing if you want to use this software under different a
license.
I make no warranty or representation, either express or implied, with respect the behavior of this script, its quality, performance, accuracy, merchantability, or fitness for a particular purpose. This script is provided 'as is', and you, by making use thereof, are assuming the entire risk. That said, I hope you this script useful. Have fun!