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turf

a node.js library for performing geospatial operations with geojson

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turf

turf

a node.js library for performing geospatial operations with geojson

All features are written in a functional manner with no side effects. In nearly all cases, they accept objects created by the point, linestring, polygon, and featurecollection functions, but these are simply for convenience. Any valid geojson Feature of FeatureCollection will do.

npm install turf

Turf can also be run in a browser. To use it, download the minified file, and include it in a script tag.

<script src="turf.min.js"></script> 

It can also be installed using bower:

bower install turf

note: This module is under active development and is in a pre-release form. The first official release is planned mid November 2013. Most features are pretty stable, but expect some changes periodically up until then.


Features

  • load
  • save
  • point
  • linestring
  • polygon
  • featurecollection
  • extent
  • square
  • size
  • center
  • bboxPolygon
  • envelope
  • centroid
  • explode
  • combine
  • remove
  • filter
  • distance
  • buffer
  • nearest
  • tin
  • grid
  • planepoint
  • inside
  • midpoint
  • quantile
  • jenks
  • reclass
  • contour
  • sample
  • tag
  • bezier
  • simplify

Planned Features

Additional feature requests welcomed and encouraged. To request a feature, please add a github issue with a description.

  • sum
  • average
  • aggregate
  • krige
  • interval
  • cluster
  • interpolate
  • area
  • intersect
  • union
  • erase
  • smooth

Examples:

load

Loads a Feature or FeaturCollection from a file.

var t = require('turf')
geojsonFile = '/path/to/file/tress.geojson'

t.load(geoJsonFile, function(err, trees){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(trees)
})

save

Saves out a feature or feature collection. 'geojson' and 'topojson' are currently supported.

var path = './testOut/poly.geojson'
var poly = t.polygon([[[0,0], [1,0], [1,1],[0,1]]])
var type = 'geojson'
t.save(path, poly, type, function(err, res){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(res) // 1
  done()
})

point

Creates a geojson point Feature based on an x and a y coordinate. Properties can be added optionally.

var t = require('turf')

var point1 = t.point(-75.343, 39.984)
var point2 = t.point(-75.343, 39.984, {name: 'point 1', population: 5000})
console.log(point1)
console.log(point2)

linestring

Creates a geojson linestring Feature based on a coordinate array. Properties can be added optionally.

var t = require('turf')

var linestring1 = t.linestring([[102.0, -10.0], [103.0, 1.0], [104.0, 0.0], [130.0, 4.0]])
var linestring2 = t.linestring([[102.0, -10.0], [103.0, 1.0], [104.0, 0.0], [130.0, 4.0]], 
  {name: 'line 1', distance: 145})
console.log(linestring1)
console.log(linestring2)

polygon

Creates a geojson polygon Feature based on a coordinate array. Properties can be added optionally.

var t = require('turf')

var polygon1 = t.point([[[20.0,0.0],[101.0,0.0],[101.0,1.0],[100.0,1.0],[100.0,0.0]]])
var polygon2 = t.point([[[20.0,0.0],[101.0,0.0],[101.0,1.0],[100.0,1.0],[100.0,0.0]]], 
  {name: 'line 1', distance: 145})
console.log(polygon1)
console.log(polygon2)

featurecollection

Creates a geojson FeatureCollection based on an array of features.

var t = require('turf')
var pt1 = t.point(-75.343, 39.984, {name: 'Location A'})
var pt2 = t.point(-75.833, 39.284, {name: 'Location B'})
var pt3 = t.point(-75.534, 39.123, {name: 'Location C'})

var fc = t.featurecollection([pt1, pt2, pt3])
console.log(fc)

extent

Calculates the extent of all features and returns a bounding box.

var t = require('turf')

t.load('path/to/file/example.geojson', function(err, features){
  if(err) throw err
  t.extent(features, function(extent){
    console.log(extent) // [minX, minY, maxX, maxY]
  })
})

square

Calculates the minimum square bounding box for another bounding box.

var t = require('turf')
var bbox = [0,0,5,10]]

t.square(bbox, function(err, square){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(square) // [-2.5, 0, 7.5, 10]
})

size

Takes a bbox and returns a new bbox with a size expanded or contracted by a factor of X.

var bbox = [0, 0, 10, 10]

t.size(bbox, 2, function(err, doubled){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(doubled) // [-10, -10, 20, 20]
})

center

Calculates the absolute center point of all features.

var t = require('turf')

t.load('path/to/file/example.geojson', function(layer, err){
  if(err) throw err
  t.center(layer, function(center){
    console.log(center)
  })
})

bboxPolygon

Takes a bbox and returns the equivalent polygon feature.

var t = require('turf')
var bbox = [0,0,10,10]

t.bboxPolygon(bbox, function(err, poly){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(poly)
})

envelope

Takes a Feature or FeatureCollection and returns a rectangular polygon feature that encompasses all vertices.

var t = require('turf')
var pt1 = t.point(-75.343, 39.984, {name: 'Location A'})
var pt2 = t.point(-75.833, 39.284, {name: 'Location B'})
var pt3 = t.point(-75.534, 39.123, {name: 'Location C'})
var fc = t.featurecollection([pt1, pt2, pt3])

t.envelope(fc, function(err, envelopePoly){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(envelopePoly)
})

centroid

Calculates the centroid of a polygon Feature or FeatureCollection using the geometric mean of all vertices. This lessons the effect of small islands and artifacts when calculating the centroid of a set of polygons.

var t = require('turf')
var poly = t.polygon([[[0,0], [0,10], [10,10] , [10,0]]])

t.centroid(poly, function(err, centroid){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(centroid) // a point at 5, 5
})

explode

Takes a Feature or FeatureCollection and return all vertices as a collection of points.

var t = require('turf')
var poly = t.polygon([[[0,0], [0,10], [10,10] , [10,0]]])

t.explode(poly, function(err, vertices){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(vertices)
})

combine

Combines feature collection of point, linestring, or polygon features into multipoint, multilinestring, or multipolygon features.

var t = require('turf')
var pt1 = t.point(50, 1)
var pt2 = t.point(100, 101)
var fc = t.featurecollection([pt1, pt2])

t.combine(fc, function(err, combined){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(combined)
})

remove

Removes any features from a feature collection that match a property value.

var t = require('turf')
var trees = t.featurecollection([t.point(1,2, {species: 'oak'}), 
                                 t.point(2,1, {species: 'dogwood'}), 
                                 t.point(3,1, {species: 'maple'})])

t.remove(points, 'species', 'dogwood', function(err, result) {
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(result)
})

filter

Keeps any features from a feature collection that match a property value.

var t = require('turf')
var trees = t.featurecollection([
  t.point(1,2, {species: 'oak'}),
  t.point(2,1, {species: 'birch'}), 
  t.point(3,1, {species: 'oak'}),
  t.point(2,2, {species: 'redwood'}), 
  t.point(2,3, {species: 'maple'}), 
  t.point(4,2, {species: 'oak'})
  ])

t.filter(trees, 'species', 'oak', function(err, oaks){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(oaks)
})

inside

Checks to see if a point is inside of a polygon. The polygon can be convex or concave.

var t = require('turf')
var poly = t.polygon([[[0,0], [50, 50], [0,100], [100,100], [100,0]]])
var pt = t.point(75, 75)

t.inside(pt, poly, function(err, isInside){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(isInside) // true
})

buffer

Buffers a point feature to a given radius. Lines and Polygons support coming soon. Unit selection coming soon too (degrees, miles, km).

var t = require('turf')
var pt = t.point(0, 0.5)
var unit = 'miles'

t.buffer(pt, 10, unit, function(err, buffered){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(buffered)
})

distance

Calculates the distance between two point features in degrees, radians, miles, or kilometers. This uses the haversine formula to account for global curvature.

var t = require('turf')
var point1 = t.point(-75.343, 39.984)
var point2 = t.point(-75.534, 39.123)
var unit = 'miles' // or 'kilometers', 'degrees', 'radians'

t.distance(point1, point2, unit, function(err, distance){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(distance)
})

nearest

Returns the nearest point feature.

var t = require('turf')    
var inPoint = t.point(-75.4, 39.4, {name: 'Location A'})

var pt1 = t.point(-75.343, 39.984, {name: 'Location B'})
var pt2 = t.point(-75.833, 39.284, {name: 'Location C'})
var pt3 = t.point(-75.534, 39.123, {name: 'Location D'})
var inFeatures = t.featurecollection([pt1, pt2, pt3])

t.nearest(inPoint, inFeatures, function(err, closestPoint){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(closestPoint)
})

tin

Takes a set of points and the name of a z-value property and creates a tin (Triangulated Irregular Network). These are often used for developing elevation contour maps or stepped heat visualizations.

var t = require('turf')
var z = 'elevation'

t.load('/path/to/pointsfeatures/elevationPoints.geojson', function(err, points){
  t.tin(points, z, function(err, tin){
    if(err) throw err
    console.log(tin)
  })
})

grid

Takes a bounding box and a cell depth and outputs a feature collection of points in a grid.

var t = require('turf')
var depth = 15

t.grid([0,0,10,10], depth, function(err, grid){
  console.log(grid) // 15x15 grid of points in a FeatureCollection
})

planepoint

Takes a trianglular plane and calculates the z value for a point on the plane.

var t = require('turf')
var point = t.point(-75.3221, 39.529)
// triangle is a polygon with "a", "b", and "c" values representing
// the values of the coordinates in order.
var triangle = t.polygon(
    [[[-75.1221,39.57],[-75.58,39.18],[-75.97,39.86]]], 
    {"a": 11, "b": 122, "c": 44}
  )

t.planepoint(point, triangle, function(err, zValue){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(zValue)
})

midpoint

Takes two point features and returns the mid point.

var t = require('turf')
var pt1 = t.point(0,0)
var pt2 = t.point(10, 0)

t.midpoint(pt1, pt2, function(err, midpoint){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(midpoint)
})

quantile

Takes a set of features, a property name, and a set of percentiles and outputs a quantile array. This can be passed as a break array to the contour function.

var t = require('turf')
var propertyName = 'elevation'
var percentiles = [10,30,40,60,80,90,99]

t.load('./testIn/Points3.geojson', function(err, pts){
  if(err) throw err
  t.quantile(pts, propertyName, percentiles, function(err, quantiles){
    if(err) throw err
    console.log(quantiles) // [ 12, 25, 29, 52, 76, 99, 143 ]
  })
})

jenks

Takes a set of features, a property name, and the desired number of breaks and outputs an array of natural breaks. This classification can be used in the contour function or for theming.

var t = require('turf')
var propertyName = 'elevation'
var num = 10

t.load('./testIn/Points3.geojson', function(err, pts){
  if(err) throw err
  t.jenks(pts, 'elevation', num, function(err, breaks){
    if(err) throw err
    done() // [ 11, 12, 18, 25, 29, 41, 50, 55, 76, 90, 143 ]
  })
})

reclass

Takes a feature collection, a in field, an out field, and an array of translations and outputs an identical feature collection with the out field property populated.

var t = require('turf')
var inField = 'elevation',
    outField = 'heightIndex',
    // 0 to 20 will map to 1, 20 to 40 will map to 2, etc.
    translations = [[0, 20, 1], [20, 40, 2], [40, 60 , 3], [60, Infinity, 4]]

t.load('./testIn/Points3.geojson', function(err, pts){
  if(err) throw err
  t.reclass(pts, inField, outField, translations, function(err, outPts){
    if(err) throw err
    console.log(outPts)
  })
})

contour

Takes a FeatureCollection of points with z values and an array of value breaks and generates contour polygons. This is a great way to visualize interpolated density on a map. It is often used for elevation maps, weather maps, and isocrones. The main advantage over a heat map is that contours allow you to see definitive value boundaries, and the polygons can be used to aggregate data. For example, you could get the 5000 ft elevation contour of a mountain and the 10000 ft elevation contour, then aggregate the number of trees in each to see how elevation affects tree survival.

var t = require('turf')
var z = 'elevation'
var resolution = 15
var breaks = [.1, 22, 45, 55, 65, 85,  95, 105, 120, 180]

t.load('../path/to/points.geojson', function(err, points){
  t.contour(points, z, resolution, breaks, function(err, contours){
    if(err) throw err
    console.log(contours)
  })
})

sample

Takes a feature collection and returns N random features as a feature collection.

var t = require('turf')
var num = 10

t.load('./testIn/Points3.geojson', function(err, pts){
  if(err) throw err
  t.sample(pts, num, function(err, outPts){
    if(err) throw err
    console.log(outPts)
  })
})

tag

Performs a spatial join on a set of points from a set of polygons.

var t = require('turf')

t.load('./testIn/tagPoints.geojson', function(err, points){
  t.load('./testIn/tagPolygons.geojson', function(err, polygons){
    t.tag(points, polygons, 'polyID', function(err, taggedPoints){
      console.log(taggedPoints)
    })
  })
})

bezier

Takes a linestring and outputs a curved version of the line.

var t = require('turf')
var resolution = 5000
var intensity = .85
var lineIn = t.linestring([
      [
        -80.08724212646484,
        32.77428536643231
      ],
      [
        -80.03746032714844,
        32.84007757059952
      ],
      [
        -80.01548767089844,
        32.74512501406368
      ],
      [
        -79.95368957519531,
        32.850461360442424
      ]
    ])

t.bezier(lineIn, 5000, .85, function(err, lineOut){
  if(err) throw err
  console.log(lineOut)
})

simplify

Takes a feature collection of polygons or linestrings and returns a simplified version, preserving topology of shared boundaries.

var t = require('turf')
var quantization = 50
var minimumArea = 0

t.load('./path/to/complex.geojson', function(err, polys){
  t.simplify(polys, quantization, minimumArea, function(err, simplified){
    if(err) throw err
    console.log(simplified)
  })
})

This library is built and maintained by @morganherlocker :)

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Package last updated on 05 Dec 2013

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