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authorMinh Nguyễn <mxn@1ec5.org>2017-01-04 18:52:22 -0800
committerMinh Nguyễn <mxn@1ec5.org>2017-01-04 21:48:32 -0800
commit2382f199c11ae7c864fc41ac83aadc83b560ca10 (patch)
tree9c778bee19073f04835f8be831fd3fd09f6f7617 /platform/ios
parentd2efbc99159a6503e483b41e5adf43656c6413d3 (diff)
downloadqtlocation-mapboxgl-2382f199c11ae7c864fc41ac83aadc83b560ca10.tar.gz
[ios] Link guides to each other
Diffstat (limited to 'platform/ios')
-rw-r--r--platform/ios/docs/guides/For Style Authors.md2
-rw-r--r--platform/ios/docs/guides/Runtime Styling.md2
-rw-r--r--platform/ios/docs/guides/Working with Mapbox Studio.md15
3 files changed, 11 insertions, 8 deletions
diff --git a/platform/ios/docs/guides/For Style Authors.md b/platform/ios/docs/guides/For Style Authors.md
index 2e7ed6e4a7..96a0661af6 100644
--- a/platform/ios/docs/guides/For Style Authors.md
+++ b/platform/ios/docs/guides/For Style Authors.md
@@ -94,6 +94,8 @@ dynamically as a user interacts with your application. The style itself is
represented at runtime by an `MGLStyle` object, which provides access to various
`MGLSource` and `MGLStyleLayer` objects that represent content sources and style
layers, respectively.
+For more information about the capabilities exposed by the runtime styling API,
+see “[Runtime Styling](runtime-styling.html)”.
The names of runtime styling classes and properties on iOS are generally
consistent with the style specification and Mapbox Studio’s Styles editor. Any
diff --git a/platform/ios/docs/guides/Runtime Styling.md b/platform/ios/docs/guides/Runtime Styling.md
index deace0d728..6a4718980d 100644
--- a/platform/ios/docs/guides/Runtime Styling.md
+++ b/platform/ios/docs/guides/Runtime Styling.md
@@ -46,6 +46,8 @@ Draw custom shapes on the map the same way you would a custom `UIView` or `CALay
## Resources
+* [Information for style authors](for-style-authors.html)
+* [Mapbox Streets source reference](https://www.mapbox.com/vector-tiles/mapbox-streets-v7/)
* [Mapbox Style Specification](https://www.mapbox.com/mapbox-gl-style-spec/)
* [Mapbox Studio](https://www.mapbox.com/mapbox-studio/)
* [iOS code examples](https://www.mapbox.com/ios-sdk/examples/)
diff --git a/platform/ios/docs/guides/Working with Mapbox Studio.md b/platform/ios/docs/guides/Working with Mapbox Studio.md
index 97aa614c41..2360bf6421 100644
--- a/platform/ios/docs/guides/Working with Mapbox Studio.md
+++ b/platform/ios/docs/guides/Working with Mapbox Studio.md
@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
# Working with Mapbox Studio
-[Mapbox Studio](http://mapbox.com/studio) is Mapbox's tool for creating custom map styles. It also serves as an excellent tool for rapidly prototyping dynamic maps and runtime styling interactions for iOS.
+[Mapbox Studio’s Styles editor](http://mapbox.com/studio) is Mapbox's tool for creating custom map styles. It also serves as an excellent tool for rapidly prototyping dynamic maps and [runtime styling](runtime-styling.html) interactions for iOS.
## Creating a base style
@@ -38,7 +38,7 @@ Next, add data properties you'd like to use to drive your style. Consider catego
* Text along a line: add line with a text property
* Text at specific points on a line or polygon: in addition to the line, create points at the specific points you'd like with text properties
* If you want circles where scale doesn't matter relative to the geography (e.g. always 20 pixels), you can add as a point and style with a circle layer or a symbol
-* If you want circles or arcs where the scale matters (e.g. 10 mile radius), you'll need to approximately freehand a polygon, and you can create more precisely later in code.
+* If you want circles or arcs where the scale matters (e.g. 10 mile radius), you'll need to approximately freehand a polygon that you can create more precisely later in code.
When you're done, save your dataset and export as a tileset. When that's complete, add your tileset to your style.
@@ -74,18 +74,18 @@ Once you're happy with the styles you've created, it's time to [get setup with M
To implement your prototypes with runtime styling:
-1. Implement `MGLMapViewDelegate` `-mapView:didFinishLoadingStyle:`
-2. Add your real data as a source
+1. Implement `-[MGLMapViewDelegate mapView:didFinishLoadingStyle:]`.
+2. Add your real data as a source:
* This can be done using vector data from tileset editor ([example](https://www.mapbox.com/ios-sdk/examples/runtime-circle-styles)), custom vector tiles, added as GeoJSON ([example](https://www.mapbox.com/ios-sdk/examples/runtime-add-line), or added manually through the app via `MGLShapeSource` ([example](https://www.mapbox.com/ios-sdk/examples/runtime-multiple-annotations))
-3. For each layer you've prototyped in studio, add it's corresponding `MGLStyleLayer` subclass: `MGLSymbolStyleLayer`, `MGLLineStyleLayer`, `MGLFillStyleLayer`, or `MGLCircleStyleLayer`.
+3. For each layer you've prototyped in Studio, add its corresponding `MGLStyleLayer` subclass. See [“Configuring the map content’s appearance”](for-style-authors.html#configuring-the-map-content-s-appearance) for the available style layer classes.
**Translating style attributes from Studio**
-For each property you've edited in Studio, you can hover over the property name to find it's corresponding property in the iOS SDK. They're generally the camelCased version of the Property ID.
+For each property you've edited in Studio, you can hover over the property name to find the corresponding property in the iOS SDK. It’ll generally be the camelCased version of the Property ID, but see [“Configuring the map content’s appearance”](for-style-authors.html#configuring-the-map-content-s-appearance) for a table of properties that differ between Mapbox Studio and the iOS SDK.
![property values](img/studio-workflow/property-values.png)
**Translating stop functions**
-It's possible to use stop functions in Mapbox Studio to transition the style of a layer by it's zoom level (e.g. a line that gets wider as you zoom in). These can be translated in the mobile SDKs using `+[MGLSyleValue valueWithInterpolationBase:stops:]`. The rate of change between stops in studio is represented by `interpolationBase`.
+It's possible to use stop functions in Mapbox Studio to transition the style of a layer by its zoom level (e.g. a line that gets wider as you zoom in). These can be translated in the mobile SDKs using `+[MGLSyleValue valueWithInterpolationBase:stops:]`. The rate of change between stops in Studio is represented by `interpolationBase`.
![Stop functions](img/studio-workflow/stop-functions.png)
@@ -94,4 +94,3 @@ It's possible to use stop functions in Mapbox Studio to transition the style of
* [Mapbox Style Specification](https://www.mapbox.com/mapbox-gl-style-spec/)
* [Mapbox Studio](https://www.mapbox.com/mapbox-studio/)
* [iOS code examples](https://www.mapbox.com/ios-sdk/examples/)
-