make different projections
npm install dirty-reprojectorsQuick and dirty re-projections to trick your web maps out of web mercator.
npm install -g dirty-reprojectors
cat input.geojson | dirty-reproject --forward PROJECTION [--reverse PROJECTION=mercator] > output.geojson
Example: to reproject some geojson so that web mapping libraries will render it
looking like 'albersUsa':
cat input.geojson | dirty-reproject --forward albersUsa > output.geojson
For a list of supported projections, dirty-reproject --list
#### reproject
Reprojects the given geometry coordinate array _in place_, with
unprojectable points or degenerate geometries removed. If bothoptions.forward and options.reverse are supplied, then forward is
performed first.
Parameters
- options Object
- options.forward (Function \| string)? The forward projection to use.
- options.reverse (Function \| string)? The reverse projection to use.
- options.projections Object? A map of named projections to use. If provided, then string values of options.forward or options.reverse will be used as keys to look up the projection function in options.projections. For an extensive list provided by d3-geo-projection, use require('dirty-reprojectors/projections').
- coordinates Array
Take, for example:
cat input.geojson | dirty-reproject --forward albersUsa > output.geojson
What this actually does is:
1. Project input.geojson from WGS 84 (longitude/latitude) into albersUsa, with the target coordinates scaled to match the dimensions of Web Mercator.
2. Reverse-project the result back to WGS84 _as if_ it had been projected with Web Mercator. So now, when your favorite web mapping library tries to project it into mercator, the geometries end up looking like they were projected using Albers.
The main catch is that if you actually look at the longitude/latitude
coordinates in output.geojson, they are totally wrong. (There are other,
subtler catches, too, having to do with Web Mercator's limited latitude range,
varying loss of precision, and probably many other nuances I am not aware of.)
- Inspired by this trick
- All the heavy lifting here is thanks to Mike Bostock's excellent d3-geo and de-geo-projection