Hello, We are currently working on an application using Boostrap 3, OpenLayers 3 and AngularJS 1.2. You can test it here: http://mf-geoadmin3.bgdi.admin.ch/main/prod/?lang=fr&topic=ech&bgLayer=ch.swisstopo.pixelkarte-farbe&X=190000.00&Y=660000.00&zoom=1
You can find all the source code here: https://github.com/geoadmin/mf-geoadmin3 We have tried to architecture the application in a way that allows the sharing of elements. The components directory https://github.com/geoadmin/mf-geoadmin3/tree/master/src/componentscontains, for example, a KML importer or a WMS browser that could be used in other applications. These components could be the start of a library equivalent to GeoExt. So, I would be happy to hear other's opinion about the creation of "ngGeo". Cédric On Tue, Jul 30, 2013 at 2:46 PM, Raffaele Morelli <raffaele.more...@gmail.com> wrote: > 2013/7/26 Andreas Hocevar <ahoce...@opengeo.org> >> >> GeoExt 2 is currently mostly maintained by terrestris, and a release is >> still on their todo list. To my knowledge, there are no plans to create >> something like GeoExt for Leaflet or OpenLayers 3. >> >> Having said that, a combination of OpenLayers 3 with a JavaScript library >> (e.g. JQuery), a widget collection (e.g. Bootstrap) and application logic in >> a MVC framework (e.g. AngularJS) is a promising alternative to an all-in-one >> framework like GeoExt. >> >> Andreas. > > > That's interesting. > Is there any demo/howto which follows this approach? <http://twitter.com/cedricmoullet>
_______________________________________________ Users mailing list Users@geoext.org http://www.geoext.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/users