Google maps api key.
Example:
<GoogleMap
bootstrapURLKeys={{
key: API_KEY,
language: 'ru',
region: 'ru',
libraries:['places'],
...otherUrlParams,
}}
>
[lat, lng]
or { lat: lat, lng: lng}
Default lat/lng at which to center the map - changing this prop throws a warning
[lat, lng]
or { lat: lat, lng: lng}
Lat/lng at which to center the map
Default map zoom level - changing this prop throws a warning
Map zoom level
Default: 30
In onChange callback, gives you a marginBounds argument property, where lat lng will be shifted using margin you have set. For example, you could use a simple check pointInRect to not show Markers near map bounds.
Default: true
You can add some "layers" for map like a traffic or transit
layerTypes={['TrafficLayer', 'TransitLayer']}
Set map options such as controls positions / styles, etc.
Example:
createMapOptions: function (maps) {
return {
panControl: false,
mapTypeControl: false,
scrollwheel: false,
styles: [{ stylers: [{ 'saturation': -100 }, { 'gamma': 0.8 }, { 'lightness': 4 }, { 'visibility': 'on' }] }]
}
}
<GoogleMap options={createMapOptions} ... />
See "Custom map options example" in Examples below for a further example. See full options at Google Maps Javascript API docs
({ x, y, lat, lng, event })
The event
prop in args is the outer div onClick event, not the gmap-api 'click' event.
Example:
_onClick = ({x, y, lat, lng, event}) => console.log(x, y, lat, lng, event)
// ES5 users
function _onClick(obj){ console.log(obj.x, obj.y, obj.lat, obj.lng, obj.event);}
<GoogleMap onClick={_onClick} ... />
({ center, zoom, bounds, marginBounds })
[lat, lng] = center;
[topLat, leftLng, bottomLat, rightLng] = bounds;
When true this will reset the map bounds if the parent resizes.
Default: false
When the map stops moving after the user drags. Takes into account drag inertia.
When the user changes the map type (HYBRID, ROADMAP, SATELLITE, TERRAIN) this fires
Directly access the maps API - use at your own risk!
This function is called when the visible tiles have finished loading.
<GoogleMap onGoogleApiLoaded={({map, maps}) => console.log(map, maps)} />
To prevent warning message add yesIWantToUseGoogleMapApiInternals property to GoogleMap
<GoogleMap onGoogleApiLoaded={({map, maps}) => console.log(map, maps)}
yesIWantToUseGoogleMapApiInternals
/>
Add custom style to div
(marker container element) created by OverlayView, for example: {pointerEvents: 'none'}
.
Latitude to place the marker component
Longitude to place the marker component
GoogleMap passes a $hover prop to hovered components. To detect hover it an uses internal mechanism, explained in x_distance_hover example
Example:
render() {
const style = this.props.$hover ? greatPlaceStyleHover : greatPlaceStyle;
return (
<div style={style}>
{this.props.text}
</div>
);
}
Use fitBounds to get zoom and center.
Example:
import { fitBounds } from 'google-map-react';
const bounds = {
nw: {
lat: 50.01038826014866,
lng: -118.6525866875
},
se: {
lat: 32.698335045970396,
lng: -92.0217273125
}
};
// Or
const bounds = {
ne: {
lat: 50.01038826014866,
lng: -118.6525866875
},
sw: {
lat: 32.698335045970396,
lng: -92.0217273125
}
};
const size = {
width: 640, // Map width in pixels
height: 380, // Map height in pixels
};
const {center, zoom} = fitBounds(bounds, size);
Make sure the container element has width and height. The map will try to fill the parent container, but if the container has no size, the map will collapse to 0 width / height.
Initially any map object has its top left corner at lat lng coordinates. It's up to you to set the object origin to 0,0 coordinates.
Example (centering the marker):
const greatPlaceStyle = {
position: 'absolute',
transform: 'translate(-50%, -50%)'
}
render() {
return (
<div style={greatPlaceStyle}>
{this.props.text}
</div>
);
}
If at the moment of GoogleMap control created, a modal has no size (width,height=0) or/and not displayed, the simple solution is to add something like this in render:
render() {
return this.props.modalIsOpen
? <GoogleMap />
: null;
}
import React from 'react';
import ReactDOM from 'react-dom';
export default class SearchBox extends React.Component {
static propTypes = {
placeholder: React.PropTypes.string,
onPlacesChanged: React.PropTypes.func
}
render() {
return <input ref="input" {...this.props} type="text"/>;
}
onPlacesChanged = () => {
if (this.props.onPlacesChanged) {
this.props.onPlacesChanged(this.searchBox.getPlaces());
}
}
componentDidMount() {
var input = ReactDOM.findDOMNode(this.refs.input);
this.searchBox = new google.maps.places.SearchBox(input);
this.searchBox.addListener('places_changed', this.onPlacesChanged);
}
componentWillUnmount() {
// https://developers.google.com/maps/documentation/javascript/events#removing
google.maps.event.clearInstanceListeners(this.searchBox);
}
}
You will need to preload the google maps API, but google-map-react
checks if the base api is already loaded,
and if so, uses it, so it won't load a second copy of the library.
<script type="text/javascript" src="https://maps.google.com/maps/api/js?libraries=places"></script>
WARNING: Setting this option can break markers calculation, causing no homeomorphism between screen coordinates and map.
You can use the minZoom
custom option to prevent our minimum-zoom calculation:
function createMapOptions() {
return {
minZoom: 2,
};
}
Google Maps provides control over the behavior of touch based interaction with the map.
For example, on mobile devices swiping up on the map might mean two things: Scrolling the container or panning the map.
To resolve this ambigiuity, you can use the custom map option gestureHandling
to get the required behavior.
function createMapOptions() {
return {
gestureHandling: 'greedy' // Will capture all touch events on the map towards map panning
}
}
The default setting is gestureHandling:auto
which tries to detect based on the page/content sizes if a greedy
setting is best (no scrolling is required) or cooperative
(scrolling is possible)
For more details see the google documentation for this setting.
To use the heatmap layer, add visualization
to the libraries property array on bootstrapURLKeys
and provide the data & configuration for the heatmap in heatmap
as props.
Example Demo
<GoogleMapReact
bootstrapURLKeys={{
key: [YOUR_KEY],
libraries:['visualization']
}}
zoom={zoom}
center={center}
heatmap={{data}}
>
{markers}
</GoogleMapReact>
If you have multiple maps in your project and require a heatmap layer in at least one of them, provide libraries:['visualization']
to all of them. The Visualization library will then be included within the Google Map API.
The Google Map API can be accessed from the map
prop returned within onGoogleApiLoaded
.
<GoogleMapReact
bootstrapURLKeys={{
key: XXXX,
libraries: ['visualization'],
}}
onGoogleApiLoaded={({ map, maps }) => {
// access to visualization methods within `map.visualization`
}}
yesIWantToUseGoogleMapApiInternals
/>
The typescript interface for the heatmap prop is as follows:
interface IHeatmap {
positions: {
lat: Number;
lng: Number;
weight?: Number;
}[];
options: {
radius?: number;
opacity?: number;
/* other options directly from Google Heatmaps API */
};
}
This is done by setting bootstrapURLKeys.language and bootstrapURLKeys.region. Also notice that setting region to 'cn' is required when using the map from within China, see google documentation for more info. Setting 'cn' will result in use of the specific API URL for China.
If you want to include additional libraries to load with the maps api, indicate them in the libraries property of the bootstrapURLKeys
object.
Example:
<GoogleMapReact
bootstrapURLKeys={{
key: [YOUR_KEY],
libraries:['places', 'geometry', 'drawing', 'visualization']
}}
>
{markers}
</GoogleMapReact>