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  1. OpenStreetMap

    OpenStreetMap is a map of the world, created by people like you and free to use under an open license. Hosting is supported by Fastly, OSMF corporate members, and other partners.

  2. Export - OpenStreetMap

    OpenStreetMap is a map of the world, created by people like you and free to use under an open license.

  3. OpenStreetMap

    OpenStreetMap is a map of the world, created by people like you and free to use under an open license.

  4. Using OpenStreetMap - OpenStreetMap Wiki

    Web applications It's easy to use data sources that use OpenStreetMap data within a web application. From Javascript, common ways to do this include using Leaflet or OpenLayers. Lots of other options …

  5. Map features - OpenStreetMap Wiki

    OpenStreetMap represents physical features on the ground (e.g., roads or buildings) using tags attached to its basic data structures (its nodes, ways, and relations). Each tag describes a …

  6. Maperitive - OpenStreetMap Wiki

    The map will be loaded and rendered using the default rules (which are in the rules\default.txt file which came with Maperitive). These rules are similar to normal Mapnik rendering.

  7. List of OSM-based services - OpenStreetMap Wiki

    Screenshot For any page using just the OSM Map see OSM Internet Links. For smaller user favourites lists see: OpenStreetMap Links Wikimedia Geohack - Personalized links Ready-made online maps …

  8. API - OpenStreetMap Wiki

    OpenStreetMap has an editing API for fetching and saving raw geodata from/to the OpenStreetMap database — this is the entry page for the documentation. If you just want to embed a map into a …

  9. Worldwide web maps - OpenStreetMap Wiki

    This page lists OSM-based web maps with worldwide coverage. For OSM-based web maps with regional coverage/focus, see Regional web maps. For map applications on other platforms, see …

  10. Slippy map tilenames - OpenStreetMap Wiki

    File:Tiled web map numbering.png Tile numbering for zoom=2 This article describes the file naming conventions for the Slippy Map application in the OpenStreetMap website. Tiles are 256 × 256 pixel …