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This example creates a map with a simple polygon, to demonstrate the autoclose behavior for polygons. Note that only three coordinates are defined. There's no need to specify the final coordinates to complete the polygon, because the Google Maps JavaScript API will automatically draw the closing side.
Read the documentation.
TypeScript// This example creates a simple polygon representing the Bermuda Triangle. Note // that the code specifies only three LatLng coordinates for the polygon. The // API automatically draws a stroke connecting the last LatLng back to the first // LatLng. function initMap(): void { const map = new google.maps.Map( document.getElementById("map") as HTMLElement, { zoom: 5, center: { lat: 24.886, lng: -70.268 }, mapTypeId: "terrain", } ); // Define the LatLng coordinates for the polygon's path. Note that there's // no need to specify the final coordinates to complete the polygon, because // The Google Maps JavaScript API will automatically draw the closing side. const triangleCoords = [ { lat: 25.774, lng: -80.19 }, { lat: 18.466, lng: -66.118 }, { lat: 32.321, lng: -64.757 }, ]; const bermudaTriangle = new google.maps.Polygon({ paths: triangleCoords, strokeColor: "#FF0000", strokeOpacity: 0.8, strokeWeight: 3, fillColor: "#FF0000", fillOpacity: 0.35, }); bermudaTriangle.setMap(map); } declare global { interface Window { initMap: () => void; } } window.initMap = initMap;Note: Read the guide on using TypeScript and Google Maps. JavaScript
// This example creates a simple polygon representing the Bermuda Triangle. Note // that the code specifies only three LatLng coordinates for the polygon. The // API automatically draws a stroke connecting the last LatLng back to the first // LatLng. function initMap() { const map = new google.maps.Map(document.getElementById("map"), { zoom: 5, center: { lat: 24.886, lng: -70.268 }, mapTypeId: "terrain", }); // Define the LatLng coordinates for the polygon's path. Note that there's // no need to specify the final coordinates to complete the polygon, because // The Google Maps JavaScript API will automatically draw the closing side. const triangleCoords = [ { lat: 25.774, lng: -80.19 }, { lat: 18.466, lng: -66.118 }, { lat: 32.321, lng: -64.757 }, ]; const bermudaTriangle = new google.maps.Polygon({ paths: triangleCoords, strokeColor: "#FF0000", strokeOpacity: 0.8, strokeWeight: 3, fillColor: "#FF0000", fillOpacity: 0.35, }); bermudaTriangle.setMap(map); } window.initMap = initMap;Note: The JavaScript is compiled from the TypeScript snippet. CSS
/* * Always set the map height explicitly to define the size of the div element * that contains the map. */ #map { height: 100%; } /* * Optional: Makes the sample page fill the window. */ html, body { height: 100%; margin: 0; padding: 0; }HTML
<html> <head> <title>Polygon Auto-Completion</title> <link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="./style.css" /> <script type="module" src="./index.js"></script> </head> <body> <div id="map"></div> <!-- The `defer` attribute causes the script to execute after the full HTML document has been parsed. For non-blocking uses, avoiding race conditions, and consistent behavior across browsers, consider loading using Promises. See https://developers.google.com/maps/documentation/javascript/load-maps-js-api for more information. --> <script src="https://maps.googleapis.com/maps/api/js?key=AIzaSyB41DRUbKWJHPxaFjMAwdrzWzbVKartNGg&callback=initMap&v=weekly" defer ></script> </body> </html>Try Sample Clone Sample
Git and Node.js are required to run this sample locally. Follow these instructions to install Node.js and NPM. The following commands clone, install dependencies and start the sample application.
git clone -b sample-polygon-autoclose https://github.com/googlemaps/js-samples.git
cd js-samples
npm i
npm start
Other samples can be tried by switching to any branch beginning with sample-SAMPLE_NAME
.
git checkout sample-SAMPLE_NAME
npm i
npm start
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