Quick Start

Put a map on a page

Below you'll find a complete working example. Create a new file, copy in the contents below, and open in a browser:

<!doctype html>
<html lang="en">
  <head>
    <link rel="stylesheet" href="http://openlayers.org/en/v3.0.0/css/ol.css" type="text/css">
    <style>
      .map {
        height: 400px;
        width: 100%;
      }
    </style>
    <script src="http://openlayers.org/en/v3.0.0/build/ol.js" type="text/javascript"></script>
    <title>OpenLayers 3 example</title>
  </head>
  <body>
    <h2>My Map</h2>
    <div id="map" class="map"></div>
    <script type="text/javascript">
      var map = new ol.Map({
        target: 'map',
        layers: [
          new ol.layer.Tile({
            source: new ol.source.MapQuest({layer: 'sat'})
          })
        ],
        view: new ol.View({
          center: ol.proj.transform([37.41, 8.82], 'EPSG:4326', 'EPSG:3857'),
          zoom: 4
        })
      });
    </script>
  </body>
</html>

Understanding what is going on

To include a map a web page you will need 3 things:

  1. Include OpenLayers
  2. <div> map container
  3. JavaScript to create a simple map

Include OpenLayers

  <script src="http://openlayers.org/en/v3.0.0/build/ol.js" type="text/javascript"></script>

The first part is to include the JavaScript library. For the purpose of this tutorial, here we simply point to the openlayers.org website to get the whole library. In a production environment, we would build a custom version of the library including only the module needed for our application.

<div> to contain the map

  <div id="map" class="map"></div>

The map in the application is contained in a <div> HTML element. Through this <div> the map properties like width, height and border can be controlled through CSS. Here's the CSS element used to make the map 400 pixels high and as wide as the browser window.

  <style>
    .map {
      height: 400px;
      width: 100%;
    }
  </style>

JavaScript to create a simple map

  var map = new ol.Map({
    target: 'map',
    layers: [
      new ol.layer.Tile({
        source: new ol.source.MapQuest({layer: 'sat'})
      })
    ],
    view: new ol.View({
      center: ol.proj.transform([37.41, 8.82], 'EPSG:4326', 'EPSG:3857'),
      zoom: 4
    })
  });

With this JavaScript code, a map object is created with a MapQuest Open Aerial layer zoomed on the African East coast. Let's break this down:

The following line creates an OpenLayers Map object. Just by itself, this does nothing since there's no layers or interaction attached to it.

  var map = new ol.Map({ ... });

To attach the map object to the <div>, the map object takes a target into arguments. The value is the id of the <div>:

    target: 'map'

The layers: [ ... ] array is used to define the list of layers available in the map. The first and only layer right now is a tiled layer:

    layers: [
      new ol.layer.Tile({
        source: new ol.source.MapQuest({layer: 'sat'})
      })
    ]

Layers in OpenLayers 3 are defined with a type (Image, Tile or Vector) which contains a source. The source is the protocol used to get the map tiles. You can consult the list of available layer sources here

The next part of the Map object is the View. The view allow to specify the center, resolution, and rotation of the map. The simplest way to define a view is to define a center point and a zoom level. Note that zoom level 0 is zoomed out.

    view: new ol.View({
      center: ol.proj.transform([37.41, 8.82], 'EPSG:4326', 'EPSG:3857'),
      zoom: 4
    })

You will notice that the center specified is in lat/lon coordinates (EPSG:4326). Since the only layer we use is in Spherical Mercator projection (EPSG:3857), we can reproject them on the fly to be able to zoom the map on the right coordinates.