High-resolution tiles

Raster tiles

High-resolution tiles (often also called "retina" tiles) are raster tiles with a higher resolution than usual. This is a configuration feature of the tile server software.

Devices with a high-resolution display (more than 100 dpi) benefit from retina tiles because the map looks nearly as sharp as the rendered user interface around it. On screens high-resolution tiles have the effect of making everything in the image look exactly the same but bigger (it might feel like you're seeing less detail). When printing, this means you get more dots per inch, sharper print quality, but without scaling down things like text labels to become too small.

The scaled-up features of high-resolution tiles (text in bigger fonts, larger icons) will help with visual impairment.

Slippy maps may be configured to show such tiles in a scaled down size by default and the user's browser can enlarge them again if it is set to enlarged web pages (including images). Or maybe the slippy map software could read the user's dpi setting and scale accordingly (just an idea …). This may be useful on high-resolution displays to achieve resolution independence for slippy maps.

Examples


Vector tiles

Vector tiles are shipped as vector data to the client and therefore are not directly bound to a defined resolution. They are an alternative for simple maps and mobile devices because the rastering usually happens on client side.

See also

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