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Pure JavaScript library for parsing Shapefiles, returns Geojson projected into WGS84 lat lons.
For use in node, rollup, webpack and where ever ESM modules are used we have a lovely package you can install via npm or yarn or whatever.
npm install shpjs --save
If you need a stand alone file to include in your webpage the old fashioned way then you can grab the built version that's either included in the repo or you can use unpkg.
https://unpkg.com/shpjs@latest/dist/shp.js
or
https://unpkg.com/shpjs@latest/dist/shp.min.js
When using this library in some sort of bundler for the browser, no polyfills for node apis are required, the only thing needed is some sort of dependency resolver plugin like rollup node-resolve if your bundler doesn't have it, you are almost certainly already using one to get this library anyway.
Addtionally you can import it directly into an esm based web script with
import shp from 'https://unpkg.com/shpjs@latest/dist/shp.esm.js'
There are 3 ways to use it:
1. you can pass it a url to a shapefile, either to the shapefile itself (with or without the .shp suffix)
import shp from 'shpjs';
//for the shapefiles in the folder called 'files' with the name pandr.shp
const geojson = await shp("files/pandr.shp");
or you can pass it a url to a a .zip file which contains the shapefile
//for the shapefiles in the files folder called pandr.shp
const geojson = await shp("files/pandr.zip");
2. you can pass in in a binary buffer (ArrayBuffer, TypedArray, DataView, Node Buffer) containing a zip file containing at least one shapefile like from a file in node:
// in node
const data = await fs.readFile('./path/to/shp.zip');
const geojson = await shp(data);
or the File API in the browser
// in browser from some sort of file upload
const data = await file.arrayBuffer()
const geojson = await shp(data);
3. You can pass in an object with shp
, dbf
, prj
, and cpg
properties.
const object = {}
object.shp = await fs.readFile('./path/to/file.shp');
// dbf is optional, but needed if you want attributes
object.dbf = await fs.readFile('./path/to/file.dbf');
// prj is optional, but needed if your file is in some projection you don't want it in
object.prj = await fs.readFile('./path/to/file.prj');
// cpg is optional but needed if your dbf is in some weird (non utf8) encoding.
object.cpg = await fs.readFile('./path/to/file.cpg');
const geojson = await shp(object)
If there is only one shp in the zipefile it returns geojson, if there are multiple then it will be an array. All of the geojson objects have an extra key fileName
the value of which is the
name of the shapefile minus the extension (I.E. the part of the name that's the same for all of them).
Descended in a ship of theseus way from RandomEtc's shapefile library no code is shared.
FAQs
Load shapefiles in pure JavaScript
We found that shpjs demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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