Mapshaper is software for editing Shapefile, GeoJSON, TopoJSON and several other data formats, written in JavaScript.
The mapshaper
command line program supports essential map making tasks like simplifying shapes, editing attribute data, clipping, erasing, dissolving, filtering and more.
The web UI supports interactive simplification, attribute data editing, and running cli commands in a built-in console. Visit the public website at www.mapshaper.org or use the web UI locally via the mapshaper-gui
script.
See the project wiki for more documentation on how to use mapshaper.
To suggest improvements, add an issue.
To learn about recent updates, read the changelog.
The mapshaper
command line program has been used successfully under Mac OS X, Linux and Windows.
The project wiki has an introduction to using the command line tool that includes many simple examples.
For a detailed reference, see the Command Reference.
The web UI works in recent versions of Chrome and Firefox as well as IE 10+. Exporting is not supported in Safari. If you encounter out-of-memory errors using Chrome, try Firefox, which can handle Shapefiles larger than 1GB.
The mapshaper distribution includes the script mapshaper-gui
, which runs mapshaper's web interface locally. You can also visit mapshaper.org to use mapshaper online.
All processing is done in the browser, so your data stays private, even when using the public website.
Mapshaper requires Node.js.
With Node installed, you can install the latest release version of mapshaper using npm. Install with the "-g" flag to make the executable scripts available systemwide.
npm install -g mapshaper
To install and run the latest development code from github:
git clone git@github.com:mbloch/mapshaper.git
cd mapshaper
npm install
bin/mapshaper # run the command line program
bin/mapshaper-gui # use the web UI locally
Run the build
script to build both the cli and web UI modules.
Run npm test
in the project directory to run mapshaper's tests.
This software is licensed under MPL 2.0.
According to Mozilla's FAQ, "The MPL's ‘file-level’ copyleft is designed to encourage contributors to share modifications they make to your code, while still allowing them to combine your code with code under other licenses (open or proprietary) with minimal restrictions."
Gregor Aisch, Mike Bostock, Shan Carter and Zhou Yi, for suggesting improvements and general helpfulness.
Mark Harrower, for collaborating on the original MapShaper program at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.