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The ThinkGeo UI Web for Blazor Quickstart Guide will guide you through the process of creating a sample blazor serverside application and will help you become familiar with ThinkGeo Products. The Quickstart Guide supports ThinkGeo UI Web for Blazor 12.0 and higher and will show you how to create an ASP.NET Core Blazor application.
ThinkGeo UI Web for Blazor is a full-featured mapping control that makes it easy for any Microsoft .NET developer to add mapping functionality to a ASP.NET Core Blazor application quickly and efficiently. Using the intuitive object model, even developers inexperienced in Geographic Information Systems (GIS) can have fully functional maps working in minutes.
How do we start to learn how to take advantage of the power of ThinkGeo UI Web for Blazor? The best way is to make a sample application with it.
Get started with Blazor, you need .NET Core 3.0 and Visual Studio 2019 Preview. More information please refer to Get started with ASP.NET Core Blazor. (NOTE: ThinkGeo UI Web for Blazor only support server-side of Blazor currently, In this guide we are just using Blazor serverside as an example.)
Let's create a Blazor project after the environment is installed. Also you can run the project you just downloaded.
Now, you successfully created a native blazor serverside sample. See Get started with ASP.NET Core Blazor, If there are any issue during running this sample.
To build this sample, you need to reference the component package from NuGet Manager. NuGet brings us a flexible way and pleasant experience to manage our references.
Now, we have all the references set. let's start by writing code step by step to display a map with Shapefile.
1. Add the following code snippet to ~/_imports.razor file to reference ThinkGeo.UI.Blazor into all components in this project:
@using ThinkGeo.Core @using ThinkGeo.UI.Blazor
2. Open the ~/Pages/_host.cshtml file in the blazor project. Register the stylesheet and javascript of ThinkGeo Web For Blazor from CDN:
<head> ... <link href="https://cdn.thinkgeo.com/blazor/1.0.0/blazor.css" rel="stylesheet" /> </head> <body> ... <script src="https://cdn.thinkgeo.com/blazor/1.0.0/blazor.js"></script> </body>
3. Open ~/Pages/Index.razor file and Add a ThinkGeo.UI.Blazor.Map component at the end as following:
@page "/" <h1>Hello, world!</h1> Welcome to your new app. <Map Id="demomap" @ref="map" Background="@background" MapUnit="@ThinkGeo.Core.GeographyUnit.Meter" Center="@(new PointShape(1056665.479014, 6066042.564712))" Zoom="5"> <OverlaysSetting> <LayerOverlay Id="CustomOverlay" Layers="@layers"></LayerOverlay> </OverlaysSetting> </Map> @code{ GeoSolidBrush background = new GeoSolidBrush(GeoColor.FromHtml("#89d3f0ff")); GeoCollection<Layer> layers = new GeoCollection<Layer>(); Map map; protected override void OnInitialized() { // We create a new Layer and pass the path to a ShapeFile into its constructor. ShapeFileFeatureLayer worldLayer = new ShapeFileFeatureLayer("./Data/countries/countries.shp"); worldLayer.FeatureSource.ProjectionConverter = new ProjectionConverter(4326, 3857); // Set the worldLayer to use a preset Style. AreaStyle areaStyle = new AreaStyle(); areaStyle.FillBrush = new GeoSolidBrush(GeoColor.FromArgb(255, 233, 232, 214)); areaStyle.OutlinePen = new GeoPen(GeoColor.FromArgb(255, 118, 138, 69), 1); areaStyle.OutlinePen.DashStyle = LineDashStyle.Solid; worldLayer.ZoomLevelSet.ZoomLevel01.DefaultAreaStyle = areaStyle; // This setting will apply from ZoomLevel01 to ZoomLevel20, which means we can see the world the same style all the time no matter how far we zoom in or out. worldLayer.ZoomLevelSet.ZoomLevel01.ApplyUntilZoomLevel = ApplyUntilZoomLevel.Level20; // We need to add the worldLayer to the LayerOverlay in the map. layers.Add(worldLayer); } }
we'll use a ShapeFile containing data of the entire world. We have one such ShapeFile available to us:
(NOTE: The data used in this sample can be found in the attached sample above at “./Data/countries” folder)
Run the App by pressing F5. If you have not set up a developer license, the Map Suite Product Center will pop up. You will need to generate your developer license. For more details, please refer to http://wiki.thinkgeo.com/wiki/map_suite_developer_license_guide.
Once the developer license is ready, run the application. Your map should look like the one below:
This completes this scenario. The next thing you might want to do is to make it run on another machine that does not have a developer license. A runtime license is the one we are looking for. Here is the guide to generate a runtime license: http://wiki.thinkgeo.com/wiki/map_suite_runtime_license_guide_for_desktop
You now know the basics of using ThinkGeo Web for Blazor and are able to start adding this functionality into your own applications. Let's recap what we have learned about the object relationships and how the pieces of ThinkGeo work together: