react-google-maps-sep v4.3.2-fix
react-google-maps

React.js Google Maps integration component
Quick start: SimpleMap
Declare your Google Maps components using React components.
import {GoogleMap, Marker} from "react-google-maps";
export default function SimpleMap (props) {
return (
<section style={{height: "100%"}}>
<GoogleMap containerProps={{
style: {
height: "100%",
},
}}
defaultZoom={3}
defaultCenter={{lat: -25.363882, lng: 131.044922}}
onClick={props.onMapClick}
>
{props.markers.map((marker, index) => {
return (
<Marker
{...marker}
onRightclick={() => props.onMarkerRightclick(index)} />
);
})}
</GoogleMap>
</section>
);
}Documentation
Rule 1
Define <GoogleMap> component in the top level. Use containerProps, containerTagName to customized the wrapper DOM for the component.
Other components like <Marker> belongs to the children of <GoogleMap>. You already know this from the example code above.
Rule 2
Everything in the Methods table in the official documentation of the component could be set via component's props directly. For example, a <Marker> component has the following props:
animation, attribution, clickable, cursor, draggable, icon, label, opacity, options, place, position, shape, title, visible, zIndexRule 3
Every props mentioned in Rule 2 could be either controlled or uncontrolled property. Free to use either one depends on your use case.
Rule 4
Anything that are inside components' options property could ONLY be accessible via props.options. It's your responsibility to manage props.options object during the React lifetime for your component. My suggestion is, always use Rule 3 if possible. Only use options when it's necessary.
Map Event Triggers
One common event trigger is to resize map after the size of the container div changes:
componentDidUpdate() {
var map = ReactDOM.findDOMNode(this.refs.map);
window.google.maps.event.trigger(map, 'resize');
}
<GoogleMap {...props} ref="map" > ... </GoogleMap>Check the examples
Static hosted demo site on GitHub. The code is located under examples/gh-pages folder.
Usage
react-google-maps requires React 0.14
npm install --save react-google-mapsAll components are available on the top-level export.
import { GoogleMap, Marker, SearchBox } from "react-google-maps";Optimize bundle size
You could of course import from individual modules to save your webpack's bundle size.
import GoogleMap from "react-google-maps/lib/GoogleMap"; // Or import {default as GoogleMap} ...Additional Addons
Some addons component could ONLY be accessible via direct import:
import InfoBox from "react-google-maps/lib/addons/InfoBox";Development
First, clone the project.
git clone ...With Docker
Install docker@^1.8.2, docker-compose@^1.4.0 and optionally docker-machine@^0.4.1. Then,
docker-compose run --service-ports webThen open http://192.168.59.103:8080.
192.168.59.103 is actually your ip from docker-machine ip.
If you change code in your local, you'll need to rebuild the image to make changes happen.
If you're previously using boot2docker, you may want to migrate to docker-machine instead.
docker-compose buildWith Mac
Install node. Then,
npm install
cd examples/gh-pages
npm install
npm startThen open http://localhost:8080/webpack-dev-server/.
With Windows
Install node. Then,
npm install
cd examples/gh-pages
npm install
npm start:windowsThen open http://localhost:8080/webpack-dev-server/.
Contributing
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature') - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature) - Create new Pull Request
10 years ago