Django support depends on graphene-django
. Install the graphene-gis
with pip:
$ pip install graphene-gis
Make sure that you have appropriate driver to interact with postgis-- psycopg2
or
psycopg2-binary
. The binary package is a practical choice for development and testing
but in production it is advised to use the package built from sources. More info here.
Add it to your INSTALLED_APPS
in settings.py
:
INSTALLED_APPS = [
...
'graphene_gis',
]
Hi, check this-> geoql project out,
it demonstrates usage-- such as querying, mutations using WKT
and geojson
.
I will be adding more stuff soon such as containerization, interactive UI etc,
and more examples that showcases the library. This project provides an insight
into real-world usage of the library, do check it out.
This extension can works out of the box with WKT
, but if you want to use
GeoJSON
for input while mutations, install rest_framework_gis
alongside
it-- or check out geoql
sample project.
models.py
from django.contrib.gis.db import models
class Place(models.Model):
name = models.CharField(max_length=255)
location = models.PointField()
schema.py
from graphene_django import DjangoObjectType
from graphene_gis.converter import gis_converter # noqa
class PlaceType(DjangoObjectType):
class Meta:
model = Place
class Query(graphene.ObjectType):
place = graphene.Field(Place)
def resolve_place(self, info):
return Place(name="San Andreas", location="POINT(34.2 54.3)")
schema = graphene.Schema(query=Query)
Query
query {
place {
name
location
}
}
Query Output
"place": {
"name": "San Andreas",
"location": {
"type": "Point",
"coordinates": [34.2, 54.3]
}
}
schema.py
class PointModelType(graphene.ObjectType):
location = graphene.Field(graphene.String, to=scalars.PointScalar())
class CreatePointModelType(graphene.Mutation):
point = graphene.Field(PointModelType)
class Arguments:
location = graphene.Argument(scalars.PointScalar)
def mutate(root, info, location):
point = PointModelType(location=location)
return CreatePointModelType(point=point)
Mutation
mutation {
createPoint (location: "POINT(3 5)") {
point {
location
}
}
}
Mutation Output
"createPoint": {
"point": {
"location": "{'type': 'Point', 'coordinates': [3.0, 5.0]}"
}
}
A JSON Converter, so if you're familiar with graphene
, you know that
it sends JSONField
as stringified JSON, but with a lot of data, you
dont want to parse it in the frontend, I know it goes against having a
static type, but if you're not modifying the data on the frontend, plus
you're using typescript
which enforces types anyway, it works like a
charm.
And geojson contains JSONField
like properties section, and parsing
every node in the frontend is cumbersome if you have ~9000 entries, also
time consuming.
Output without using json_converter
{
"data": {
"vectors": [
{
"type": "Feature",
"properties": "{\"Name\": \"Blues\", \"area\": 0.0006971253332413299, \"bbox\": [74.59639001261124, 24.7077612714826, 74.61615129922414, 24.755648349214077], \"perimeter\": 0.15862406542812008}",
"geometry": {
"type": "Polygon",
"coordinates": [...]
}
}
]
}
}
Now if you're working with GeoJSON, you're not working with just one vector,
you're probably working with thousands. Voila json_converter
!!! Now you can
plot it directly, if you store it in such a way! I won't go into how to structure
the model, but this is fairly accurate description of GeoJSON
, and anyone
familiar with django
will be able to reproduce it without issues.
{
"data": {
"allVectors": [
{
"type": "Feature",
"properties": {
"Name": "Blues",
"area": 0.0006971253332413299,
"bbox": [
74.59639001261124,
24.7077612714826,
74.61615129922414,
24.755648349214077
],
"perimeter": 0.15862406542812008
},
"geometry": {
"type": "Polygon",
"coordinates": [...]
}
}
]
}
}
Rishabh Mehta eternal.blizzard23@gmail.com
If you have any issues or queries regarding acadbot, please don't hesitate to email the @author. I have a lot of free time.
I forget stuff, this section is for anyone who wants to build the package.
$ python setup.py sdist
$ twine upload dist/*
-
Targeting graphene-v3 update by March'22 -> MR
-
Install the pre-release using:
-
Django 4.2 LTS support by May'23
pip install graphene-gis==0.0.8b0
This code falls under the MIT license which permits the reuse of the proprietary software provided that all copies of the licensed software include a copy of the MIT License terms and the copyright notice. Go crazy!