Book Image

Google Maps JavaScript API Cookbook

Book Image

Google Maps JavaScript API Cookbook

Overview of this book

Day by day, the use of location data is becoming more and more popular, and Google is one of the main game changers in this area. The Google Maps JavaScript API is one of the most functional and robust mapping APIs used among Geo developers. With Google Maps, you can build location-based apps, maps for mobile apps, visualize geospatial data, and customize your own maps.Google Maps JavaScript API Cookbook is a practical, hands-on guide that provides you with a number of clear, step-by-step recipes that will help you to unleash the capabilities of the Google Maps JavaScript API in conjunction with open source or commercial GIS servers and services through a number of practical examples of real world scenarios. This book begins by covering the essentials of including simple maps for Web and mobile, adding vector and raster layers, styling your own base maps, creating your own controls and responding to events, and including your own events.You will learn how to integrate open source or commercial GIS servers and services including ArcGIS Server, GeoServer, CartoDB, Fusion Tables, and Google Maps Engine with the Google Maps JavaScript API. You will also extend the Google Maps JavaScript API to push its capabilities to the limit with additional libraries and services including geometry, AdSense, geocoding, directions, and StreetView.This book covers everything you need to know about creating a web map or GIS applications using the Google Maps JavaScript API on multiple platforms.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Google Maps JavaScript API Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Adding the bicycling layer


It is good to have the information about the cycling paths and common routes on top of base maps; Google Maps offers this as an overlay layer.

In this recipe, we will introduce the bicycling layer and its usage as an overlay in the Google Maps JavaScript API.

Getting ready

Continuing from the previous recipe, Adding the traffic layer, will simplify our work, as we will only replace the TransitLayer object with the BicyclingLayer classes. Remember to copy the code of the original recipe.

How to do it…

The steps required for showing the cycling paths and routes are presented as follows:

  1. Change the two lines containing TransitLayer, supplanting the BicyclingLayer object instead of the TransitLayer object:

        var bicyclingLayer = new google.maps.BicyclingLayer ();
        bicyclingLayer.setMap(map);
  2. You can observe the cycling paths and routes on top of the Google Maps base maps as shown in the following screenshot:

How it works...

The bicycling layer has its own subdivisions reflected...