I have added custom controller to google map api.
one div in the custom controller should be clickable.
I have added cursor:pointer as the style.
It works well in firefox but not in chrome.
In chrome browser, it displays the hand icon but click action
is not working.
This is the code I added to my html file for add the html to the custom controller.
controlText.innerHTML = '<div id="newid" class="myclass" style="width:380px; margin-left:40px; margin-bottom:20px;">Click here to proceed</div></div>';
I have added to the click event listner as following.
map.controls[google.maps.ControlPosition.BOTTOM_LEFT].clear();
map.controls[google.maps.ControlPosition.BOTTOM_RIGHT].clear();
var inputfieldControlDiv = document.createElement('div');
var inputfieldControl = new TextfieldControl(inputfieldControlDiv, map);
map.controls[google.maps.ControlPosition.BOTTOM_LEFT].push(inputfieldControlDiv);
css file
.myclass{
cursor:pointer;
}
Tested it in Mozzila, Opera, IE11, Chrome and it works (it always shows the cursors specified in your class)
Here is the fiddle: https://jsfiddle.net/eugensunic/kphe5fbL/10/
I've included the following code of yours: controlText.innerHTML = '<div id="newid" class="myclass" style="width:380px; margin-left:40px; margin-bottom:20px;">Click here to proceed</div></div>'; and the clearing as well altought I believe they are not necessary.
Here is the full code JS that is in the fiddle:
var map;
var london = new google.maps.LatLng(51.508742, -0.120850);
function TextfieldControl(controlDiv, map) {
var controlUI = document.createElement('div');
controlDiv.appendChild(controlUI);
var controlText = document.createElement('div');
controlText.innerHTML = '<div id="newid" class="myclass" onclick="alert()"style="width:380px; margin-left:40px; margin-bottom:20px;">Click here to proceed</div></div>';
controlUI.appendChild(controlText);
}
function initialize() {
var mapDiv = document.getElementById('googleMap');
var myOptions = {
zoom: 12,
center: london,
mapTypeId: google.maps.MapTypeId.ROADMAP
}
map = new google.maps.Map(mapDiv, myOptions);
var homeControlDiv = document.createElement('div');
var homeControl = new TextfieldControl(homeControlDiv, map);
map.controls[google.maps.ControlPosition.BOTTOM_LEFT].clear();
map.controls[google.maps.ControlPosition.BOTTOM_RIGHT].clear();
map.controls[google.maps.ControlPosition.BOTTOM_LEFT].push(homeControlDiv);
}
google.maps.event.addDomListener(window, 'load', initialize);
Of-course, the cursor will switch to value "default" at some point because of your margins css set to some pixels.
EDIT
The only other issue that could make the obstruction here is that you have developer tools tab open, this has been solved in this stackoverflow thread:
url: mouse hover on anchor tag does not display pointer cursor. Behavior observed on Chrome, works fine on IE 9?
If you still have problems then you shoul reveal your TestfieldControl function.
Related
I have a google map. When I click a marker I show a bootstrap modal with style="z-index:999999999999999999999999999". No problems here. However when I click the fullscreen button, the the modal is not shown anymore. It only works in normal mode. Any suggestions how to fix this?
To see a sample see: http://jsfiddle.net/segato/e8w4wmh6/
var myCenter = new google.maps.LatLng(51.508742, -0.120850);
function initialize() {
var mapProp = {
center: myCenter,
zoom: 15,
mapTypeId: google.maps.MapTypeId.ROADMAP
};
var map = new google.maps.Map(document.getElementById("googleMap"), mapProp);
var marker = new google.maps.Marker({
position: myCenter,
});
marker.setMap(map);
google.maps.event.addListener(marker, 'click', function () {
$('#myModal').modal('show');
});
}
google.maps.event.addDomListener(window, 'load', initialize);
Click the marker. Then click the full screen icon and then click a marker.
The point is that fullscreen mode use fullscreen API so anything outside the fullscreen element (in this case the map DIV) remains backward.
A workaround can be to append the modal element to the map div, for example exploiting the custom controls API.
map.controls[google.maps.ControlPosition.TOP_CENTER].push(document.getElementById("myModal"));
See working fiddle.
N.B. I have disable modal background because in the maps it came out with a wrong z position, coming of top of the modal. I think would not be difficult to fix that if you need the background.
The solution proposed did not worked for me but inspired from this page it's OK : Google maps tool tip not working full screen mode
document.getElementById('map_canvas').firstChild.appendChild(document.getElement
ById("modalLarge"));
I have the below code, based on one of the API samples. A click on the map creates a marker. A click on the marker opens up an info window. Now I want a click on the info window to do something. E.g. a click anywhere might close it, as opposed to the little cross in the corner. Or a click on it might open a new URL. Etc.
Unfortunately it seems there is no "click" event for info windows.
The closest I've got is shown as a commented out line below: I wrap my info window content in a div, and give that an onClick. This works, but there is a big border around it. I really want to be able to click anywhere in the info window box.
Is there a way?
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<meta name="viewport" content="initial-scale=1.0, user-scalable=no">
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>Click Test</title>
<script src="https://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/js?sensor=false"></script>
<script>
google.maps.visualRefresh = true; //New look visuals.
function initialize() {
var useragent = navigator.userAgent;
var mapdiv = document.getElementById("map-canvas");
if (useragent.indexOf('iPhone') != -1 || useragent.indexOf('Android') != -1 ) {
mapdiv.style.width = '100%';
mapdiv.style.height = '100%';
} else {
mapdiv.style.width = '400px';
mapdiv.style.height = '600px';
}
var mapOptions = {
zoom:3,
center: new google.maps.LatLng(37.09024, -95.712891),
mapTypeId: google.maps.MapTypeId.TERRAIN
};
var map = new google.maps.Map(document.getElementById('map-canvas'),
mapOptions);
google.maps.event.addListener(map, 'click', function(event) {
placeMarker(event.latLng);
});
function placeMarker(location) {
var marker = new google.maps.Marker({
position: location,
map: map
});
var infowindow = new google.maps.InfoWindow({
//content: "<div onClick='test1()'>(lat,lng):<br/>"+location.lat()+","+location.lng()+"</div>"
content: "(lat,lng):<br/>"+location.lat()+","+location.lng()
});
google.maps.event.addListener(marker, 'click', function() {
infowindow.open(marker.get('map'), marker);
infowindow.addListener('click',test1); //Does nothing
});
}
}
google.maps.event.addDomListener(window, 'load', initialize);
function test1(){alert("test1");}
</script>
</head>
<body>
<div id="map-canvas"></div>
</body>
</html>
UPDATE:
This image shows the problem when I use a clickable div inside the content (background set to red to show the extent of the region I can make clickable, and also that I can style; if I set a negative margin I just get scrollbars, not a bigger region!). It is the whole white area I want to be clickable, not just that red rectangle.
I decided to use InfoBox found in the Google Maps Utility Library. So in the header add a link to the library. Then replace the new google.maps.InfoWindow() line with this one:
var infowindow = new InfoBox({
closeBoxURL:"",
content: '<div onClick="test1();return false;" style="background:white;opacity:0.8;padding:8px">(lat,lng):<br/>'+
location.lat()+","+location.lng()+"</div>"
});
By setting closeBoxUrl to a blank string I get no close option. I added a large padding just so you can see that clicking right to the edge does indeed work.
You can also do it this way. I also use the boxClass option so the formatting is done in CSS:
var infoContent=document.createElement('div');
infoContent.innerHTML="(lat,lng):<br/>"+location.lat()+","+location.lng();
infoContent.onclick=test1;
var infowindow = new InfoBox({
closeBoxURL:"",
boxClass:"marker_popup",
content: infoContent,
});
(Aside, if doing it this way, on just some browsers it creates a marker below the InfoBox! Simplest fix is to change test1 so it looks like: function test1(event){alert("test1");event.preventDefault();return false;} )
P.S. I chose InfoBox over InfoBubble, as the latter has no documentation, and it had no obvious advantages to compensate for that major flaw! InfoBox has documentation and a reference. (links are for version 1.1.9)
Here's the basic code, I cut it straight out:
var loadposition = new google.maps.LatLng(<?=$feed['location'][0]?>,<?=$feed['location'][1]?>);
var markerSize = new google.maps.Size(20,34);
var houseMarker = new google.maps.MarkerImage("marker2.png",markerSize);
var markerShadowSize = new google.maps.Size(30,34);
var markerShadowPoint = new google.maps.Point(30,0);
var markerShadowAnchor = new google.maps.Point(0,35);
var houseMarkerShadow = new google.maps.MarkerImage("marker2.png",markerShadowSize,markerShadowPoint,markerShadowAnchor);
marker = new google.maps.Marker({
position:loadposition,
title:"<?=$feed['name']?>",
draggable:false,
clickable:true,
icon:houseMarker,
shadow:houseMarkerShadow
});
marker.setMap(map);
google.maps.event.addListener(marker, 'click', function(e){
var loadposition = new google.maps.LatLng(<?=$feed['location'][0]?>,<?=$feed['location'][1]?>);
var htmlContent = "<?=$feed['name']?><br/><?=$feed['address']?>";
infowindow.setPosition( loadposition );
infowindow.setContent(htmlContent);
infowindow.open(map);
});
For some reason, the shadow does not show. However, If I enable drag and drop and/or set up a marker animation (either bounce or drop) the shadow shows up once it's lifted up.. But as soon as the marker lays down the shadow disappears.
I can not find any other documentation on this nor similar questions / answers.
Thanks
The shadow image needs to be different than the marker image.
For example the marker shadow for google maps is like this;
http://maps.gstatic.com/mapfiles/shadow50.png
From your code;
var houseMarkerShadow = new google.maps.MarkerImage("marker2.png",markerShadowSize,markerShadowPoint,markerShadowAnchor);
Having the same image marker2.png as both the marker and the shadow probably isn't going to work as you expect.
It turns out that the syntax is correct. It's actually a bug with Google Chrome and Safari. Internet explorer and Firefox all render the shadow correctly.
The bug is opened at http://code.google.com/p/gmaps-api-issues/issues/detail?id=3993
I am using a google maps api v3 to load some data from a kml file. I wish to style the description data when it is shown in an info window to suit my web page.
Now I am trying to set the style:
style="margin-left:-20px;border:2px dotted #897823; et-a;"
...inside the description tag of a Kml Placemark but it is not rendering it properly.
I can see that firebug just shows up the positives values of margin and padding. It entirely ignores the negative margin values. So, I was wondering, are any limitation in using css style attributes for kml files?
<placemark>
<name><![CDATA[First Office Address]]></name>
<description>
<![CDATA[
First Line Information<br>
California addresss<br>
Peak valley<br>
<div class="cInfo">Telephone<br>
Office 9089YUHJT General: (2457TYGFR</div>
]]>
</description>
<Point>
<coordinates>-420.2300,137.5332200,0</coordinates>
</Point>
</placemark>
The issue you are having is due to Content scrubbing in the Api. Scrubbing the contents is a security measure to prevent malicious code from executing.
When a feature balloon's description contents are scrubbed, the following code is removed:
JavaScript
CSS
<iframe> tags
<embed> tags
<object> tags
If you take a look at the markup in a debugger you will see that you are actually getting something like the following:
<div style="font-family: Arial,sans-serif; font-size: small;">
<div id="iw_kml">
First Line Information<br>
California addresss<br>
Peak valley<br>
<div>Telephone<br>Office 9089YUHJT General: (2457TYGFR</div>
</div>
</div>
You don't say how you are opening the info windows, but something like the following should work for you. Basically you suppress the default info window and then build your own custom one.
function initialize() {
var myLatlng = new google.maps.LatLng(0, 0);
var myOptions = {
zoom: 12,
center: myLatlng,
mapTypeId: google.maps.MapTypeId.ROADMAP
};
var map = new google.maps.Map(
document.getElementById("map_canvas"),
myOptions
);
var layer = new google.maps.KmlLayer(
'http://www.yourserver.com/some.kml', {
// prevent default behaviour
suppressInfoWindows: true,
map: map
}
);
// bind the event handler
google.maps.event.addListener(layer, 'click', function(kmlEvent) {
showInfoWindow(kmlEvent.featureData.description);
});
// show a custom info window
function showInfoWindow(text) {
// build your window using whatever, styles, embeds or scripts
// you like. Anything included here will bypass content scrubbing
var content = "<div style='margin-left:-20px;border:2px dotted #897823;'>" + text + "</div>";
var infowindow = new google.maps.InfoWindow({
content: content
})
}
}
Obviously you can replace style='...' with class='whatever' which would then allow you to define the CSS style in an external file.
I would like to set the size of an infowindow to fit the content inside. The standard infowindow is too wide I tried to use maxWidth but it doesn't seem to work. What is the best way to resize an infowindow?
see code:
window.setContent( inspStates[i].name+ "<br/>"+"total: "+inspStates[i].totalInsp+ "<br/>"+ info);
the information that will be displayed in the bubble looks like this( \n means next line)
NY \ntotal 60 \n2009: 10 \n2010: 20 \n2011: 30
What you want to do is replace the "standard" Googlemaps infoWindow with your own, and put your content into it. Once you replace the standard GM infoWindow, you have a lot of latitude to work with. What I did is this:
Add a new style ID called #infoWindow, and set its width.
#infoWindow {
width: 150px;
}
Outside of any functions within my Javascript, I create a new infoWindow:
var infoWindow = new google.maps.InfoWindow();
Create a new var within the function that sets the information displayed by the marker(s), and set its value to the content:
var html = '<div id="infoWindow">';
html += 'NY<br />total 60<br />2009: 10<br />2010: 20<br />2011: 30';
html +='</div>';
Call the createMarker function using the location information you would have created elsewhere, and include the html var as one of the arguments:
var marker = createMarker(point,name,html);
The createMarker function you would declare elsewhere, which would bring all of the information together, display the marker on your map, and display the information above when it's clicked on:
function createMarker(latlng,name,html) {
var contentString = html;
var marker = new google.maps.Marker({
position: latlng,
map: map,
title: name
});
google.maps.event.addListener(marker, 'click', function() {
infoWindow.setContent(contentString);
infoWindow.open(map,marker);
});
}
Just so everyone is clear, if they stumble on this thread.
All you need to do is set the height and width of a container in the your info window content.
You don't need to override google classes and you don't need to get overly complicated about this.
var contentString = '<div class="map-info-window">'+
'<h1>My Info Window</h1>'+
'<p>Hello World</p>'+
'</div>';
var infowindow = new google.maps.InfoWindow({
content: contentString, });
In my css I have this:
.map-info-window {
width:200px;
height:200px;
}
That's it. That's all you need to do to set the width of a Google Maps InfoWindow.
For me this CSS works fine:
.gm-style-iw {
width: 324px !important;
height: 120px !important;
}
please take a look at following API references and examples:
Google Map V3 Examples:
https://developers.google.com/maps/documentation/javascript/examples/
Google Map V3 API Ref:
https://developers.google.com/maps/documentation/javascript/reference#MapOptions
To set the size of the bubble info-window inside a google map it's enough to add the following css in your CSS file:
.gmap-popup {
max-width:204px;
max-height:110px;
}
Adapted from this discussion.
JFrancis answers is the right one, just don't forget to add "!important" in your CSS when you set the width! This might look like a minor thing, but if you don't do it, your CSS will simply get overwritten!
#infoWindow {
width: 150px !important;
}