ThinkGeo Cloud
ThinkGeo UI Controls
ThinkGeo Open Source
Help and Support
External Resources
ThinkGeo Cloud
ThinkGeo UI Controls
ThinkGeo Open Source
Help and Support
External Resources
Note: This page is obsolete. Please visit https://docs.thinkgeo.com/products/web-maps/v12.0/quickstart/ and check out the latest docs.
ThinkGeo Web UI for Blazor is a .NET Standard component using Blazor, the cutting edge technology from Microsoft.
You can start from getting the samples from GitHub, or creating a new application in Visual Studio or VS Code. Please have a quick look at the following short videos.
Browse the demo applications to see the power of ThinkGeo Web UI for Blazor.
Samples
All samples about ThinkGeo Web UI for Blazor.
It covers the ThinkGeo.UI.Blazor namespace which resides in the ThinkGeo.UI.Blazor.dll assembly, including the map control itself, Overlays, and supported map classes. It also covers all the types in ThinkGeo.Core which is the key dependency of Blazor.
Yes, absolutely. ThinkGeo Web for Blazor is a control, so you can easily integrate it into your application just like any other control from the Toolbox. We expose a large amount of APIs that allow you to customize every aspect of the map and the user interface so that they fit in with the look and feel of your application.
Microsoft Visual Studio, or VS Code.
ThinkGeo Web for Blazor comes with native support for the most popular vector and raster file formats, and includes a free extension that enables support for more than a dozen more vector formats and raster formats. Check out Data Formats Guide for detail.
ThinkGeo Web for Blazor was designed to be easy to understand and easy to use. While mapping/GIS controls typically have a larger learning curve than other simpler controls like grids or charts, we feel ThinkGeo has taken the complexity out of mapping and allows you to develop your application in days or weeks instead of weeks or months.
We have a very active Developer Community discussion forum, a large number of “How Do I?” sample applications with source code in C#, and we also offer professional services if you need to talk with a developer one-on-one.
This article outlines various support options available through ThinkGeo. It explains the various methods and recommendations of which options work best depending on your issue.
This guide explains how to create a support ticket using the ThinkGeo customer portal. The guide also covers recommendation on when to use a support tickets versus other forms of support.
This guide explains how to create a constructive discussion forum post. It outlines the best practices in posting to ensure that your GIS questions get answered quickly and accurately.
This guide details the various ways of sending data to our support staff.
We provide our products via packages on NuGet. This will allow references to our products to be added and updated easily. We have three different types of packages on NuGet, feature packages, dependency packages, and product packages, which will be explained in detail below. Each of these packages will also have two different build branches, production and development.
This guide explains the process and rations behind ThinkGeo release schedule. It outlines release dates, version information, and various aspects related to publicly releasing ThinkGeo software.