Let a thousand flowers bloom
MapComplete is an OpenStreetMap viewer and editor. The main goal is to make it trivial to see and update information on OpenStreetMap, also for non-technical users. This is achieved by showing only features related to a single topic on the map. MapComplete contains many thematic maps, each built for a certain community of users, showing data and questions that are highly relevant for this topic. By showing only objects on a single topic, contributors are not distracted by objects that are not relevant to them. Furthermore, this allows to show (and ask for) attributes that are highly specialized (e.g. a widget that determines tree species based on pictures) but also by reusing common attributes and elements (such as showing and adding opening hours or pictures).
The design goals of MapComplete are to be:
- Easy to use, both on web and on mobile
- Easy to deploy (by not having a backend)
- Easy to set up a custom theme
- Easy to fall down the rabbit hole of OSM
The basic functionality is to download some map features from Overpass and then ask certain questions. An answer is sent back to directly to OpenStreetMap.
Furthermore, it shows images present in the image
tag or, if a wikidata
or wikimedia_commons
-tag is present, it
follows those to get these images too.
An explicit non-goal of MapComplete is to modify geometries of ways, especially generic geometry editing. (Splitting roads is possible; in some restricted themes, geometry conflation is also possible). If adding geometry would be supported, we'd also have to show all geometries (to avoid accidental intersections). This would invite showing and editing other geometries as well, resulting in a general-purpose editor. However, we already have an excellent, web-based general purpose editor.
More about MapComplete: Watch Pieter's talk on the 2021 State Of The Map Conference (YouTube) about the history, vision and future of MapComplete.
This is the repository of Map Complete. Street Complete is an Android-only application where the contributor is shown some questions to solve, after which the pin will dissappear from the map.
StreetComplete can thus be seen as a Todo-map for contributors who go on a stroll, whereas MapComplete is a website showing relevant information and which allows adding or updating information.
The codebases are separate, even though many ideas and some artwork are copied from the StreetComplete app.
All documentation can be found in the documentation directory
To develop or deploy a version of MapComplete, have a look to the guide.
It is possible to quickly make and distribute your own theme, please read the documentation on how to do this.
The main developer is currently not taking requests for new themes (unless they are commissioned). There are simply too many good thematic maps to make. We do however encourage you to try to create your own theme yourself - we'll gladly accept it as an official theme if it meets the criteria.
- An overview of all official themes.
- Buurtnatuur.be, developed for the Belgian Green party. They also funded the initial development!
- Cyclofix, further development on Open Summer of Code funded by Brussels Mobility. Landing page at https://cyclofix.osm.be/
- Bookcases cause I like to collect them.
- Map of Maps, after a tweet
- A build of the develop branch can be found here
There are plenty more. Discover them in the app.
To see statistics, consult OsmCha or the [analytics page](https://pietervdvn.goatcounter.com/
The first ever (testing) changeset https://www.openstreetmap.org/changeset/85856178 and first proper changeset: https://www.openstreetmap.org/changeset/85903433
MapComplete is set up to lure people into OpenStreetMap and to teach them while they are on the go, step by step.
A typical user journey would be:
-
Oh, this is a cool map of my specific interest! There is a lot of data already...
- The user might discover the explanation about OSM in the second tab
- The user might share the map and/or embed it in the third tab
- The user might discover the other themes in the last tab
-
The user clicks that big tempting button 'login' in order to answer questions - there's enough of these login buttons...the user creates an account.
-
The user answers a question! Hooray! The user is now transformed into a contributor.
- When at least one question is answered (AKA: having one changeset on OSM), adding a new point is unlocked
-
The user adds a new POI somewhere
- Note that all messages must be read before being able to add a point.
- In other words, sending a message to a misbehaving MapComplete user acts as having a zero-day-block. This is added deliberately to make sure new users have to read feedback from the community.
-
At 50 changesets, the personal layout is advertised. The personal theme is a theme where contributors can pick layers from all the official themes. Note that the personal theme is always available.
-
At 200 changesets, the tags become visible when answering questions and when adding a new point from a preset. This is to give more control to power users and to teach new users the tagging scheme.
-
At 250 changesets, the tags get linked to the wiki.
-
At 500 changesets, I expect contributors to be power users and to be comfortable with tagging schemes and such. The custom theme generator is unlocked.
GPLv3.0 + recommended pingback.
I love it to see where the project ends up. You are free to reuse the software (under GPL) but, when you have made your own change and are using it, I would like to know about it. Drop me a line, give a pingback in the issues,...
The core strings and builtin themes of MapComplete are translated on Hosted Weblate. You can easily make an account and start translating in their web-environment - no installation required.
You can even jump to the right translation string directly from MapComplete:
The website is purely static. This means that there is no database here, nor one is needed as all the data is kept in OpenStreetMap, Wikimedia (for images), Imgur. Settings are saved in the preferences-space of the OSM-website, amended by some local-storage if the user is not logged-in.
When viewing, the data is loaded from Overpass. The data is then converted (in the browser) to GeoJSON, which is rendered by Leaflet.
When a map feature is clicked, a popup shows the information, images and questions that are relevant for that object. The answers given by the user are sent (after a few seconds) to OpenStreetMap directly - if the user is logged in. If not logged in, the user is prompted to do so.
The UI-event-source is a class where the entire system is built upon, it acts as an observable object: another object can register for changes to update when needed.
Images are fetched from:
- The OSM
image
,image:0
,image:1
, ... tags - The OSM
wikimedia_commons
tags - If wikidata is present, the wikidata
P18
(image) claim and, if a commons link is present, the commons images
Images are uploaded to Imgur, as their API was way easier to handle. The URL is written into the changes.
The idea is that once in a while, the images are transferred to wikipedia or that we hook up wikimedia directly (but I need some help in getting their API working).
In order to avoid lots of small changesets, a changeset is opened and kept open. The changeset number is saved into the users preferences on OSM.
Whenever a change is made - even adding a single tag - the change is uploaded into this changeset. If that fails, the changeset is probably closed and we open a new changeset.
Note that changesets are closed automatically after one hour of inactivity, so we don't have to worry about closing them.
Privacy is important, we try to leak as little information as possible. All major personal information is handled by OSM. Geolocation is available on mobile only through the device's GPS location (so no geolocation is sent to Google).
TODO: erase cookies of third party websites and API's
The code is available under GPL; all map data comes from OpenStreetMap (both foreground and background maps).
Background layer selection: curated by https://github.com/osmlab/editor-layer-index
Icons are attributed in various 'license_info.json'-files and can be found in the app.