Heat maps
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A heat map (or heatmap) is a 2-dimensional data visualization technique that represents the magnitude of individual values within a dataset as a color. The variation in color may be by hue or intensity.

- User profile pages on the main openstreetmap.org web front end display a calendar heat map of the amount of user’s contributions in the past year.[1][2]
- OSM Heat Map (aka Where did you contribute?) - A Pascal Neis tool that shows a user edits in a “Heat-Map-Overlay”.[3]
- Strava's Global Heatmap - A heat map by Strava that can be used for mapping. Two browser extensions are available for this purpose.
- Tah-heatmap - A renderer that renders a
4096 x 4096PNG image of the world with each pixel corresponding to one z12 tile. - QLever petrimaps - If a QLever query inlcudes geometry data, is possible to visualize the data in a heat map.
- Overpass Ultra - Data can be visualized in a heatmap in Overpass Ultra using Mapbox/Maplibre style.[4]
- uMap - In uMap, "Heatmap" is a type of layer.[5]
- OpenStreetMap Notes Heatmap - OpenStreetMap Notes Heatmap shows the notes density in a heatmap, with links to other tools.
- Osmose - Osmose has a layer called "Osmose Issues Heatmap".
- Isosmfar ables to visualize the heatmap of a choosed value.
References
- ↑ Calendar heatmap of user contributions on user profile (GitHub issue)
- ↑ Add user profile heatmap visualization for contributions (PR)
- ↑ “Your OSM Heat Map” (aka Where did you contribute?) - neis-one.org, 14 aug 2011
- ↑ Overpass Ultra & MapLibre: Heatmaps - geoobserver.wordpress.com, 23 feb 2024
- ↑ Heatmap made easy with uMap - ybon's Diary, 21 apr 2014