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Figure_composer_output shows the Print Composer with an example print layout, including each type of map item described in the previous section.
Before printing a layout you have the possibility to view your composition without bounding boxes. This can be enabled by deactivating View ‣ Show bounding boxes or pressing the shortcut Ctrl+Shift+B.
The Print Composer allows you to create several output formats, and it is possible to define the resolution (print quality) and paper size:
Clicking the Export as image icon will ask you to enter the filename to use to export composition: in the case of multi-page composition, each page will be exported to a file with the given name appended with the page number.
You can then override the print resolution and the exported image dimensions (set in Composition panel).
By checking Crop to content option, the image output by the composer includes the minimal area enclosing all the items (map, legend, scale bar, shapes, label, image...) of each page of the composition:
The Crop to content dialog also allows to add some margins around the cropped bounds.
If you need to export your layout as a georeferenced image (e.g., to share with other projects), you need to enable this feature under the Composition Panel.
If the output format is a TIFF format, all you need to do is making sure to select the correct map item to use in Reference map, and the output will always be a GeoTIFF. For other image formats, you also need to check the Save world file option. With this option, the ‘Export as image’ action will create a world file along with the exported image.
Nota
Exporting large rasters can sometimes fail, even if there seems to be enough memory. This is a problem with the underlying Qt management of rasters.
With Export as SVG, you also need to fill the filename (used as a basename for all files in case of multi-page composition) and then can apply Crop to content option.
The SVG export options dialog also allows to:
Nota
Currently, the SVG output is very basic. This is not a QGIS problem, but a problem with the underlying Qt library. This will hopefully be sorted out in future versions.
The Export as PDF exports all the composition into a single PDF file.
If you applied to your composition or any shown layer an advanced effect such as blend modes, transparency or symbol effects, these cannot be printed as vectors, and the effects may be lost. Checking Print as a raster in the Composition Panel helps to keep the effects but rasterize the composition. Note that the Force layer to render as raster in the Rendering tab of Layer Properties dialog is a layer-level alternative that avoids global composition rasterization.
If you need to export your layout as a georeferenced PDF, in the Composition Panel, make sure to select the correct map item to use in Reference map.
The Print Composer includes generation functions that allow you to create map books in an automated way. The concept is to use a coverage layer, which contains geometries and fields. For each geometry in the coverage layer, a new output will be generated where the content of some canvas maps will be moved to highlight the current geometry. Fields associated with this geometry can be used within text labels.
Every page will be generated with each feature. To enable the generation of an atlas and access generation parameters, refer to the Atlas generation panel.This panel contains the following widgets (see figure_composer_atlas):
You also have options to set the output of the atlas:
You can use multiple map items with the atlas generation; each map will be rendered according to the coverage features. To enable atlas generation for a specific map item, you need to check Controlled by Atlas under the item properties of the map item. Once checked, you can set:
In order to adapt labels to the feature the atlas plugin iterates over, you can include expressions. What you should take care of is to place expression part (including functions, fields or variables) between [% and %]. For example, for a city layer with fields CITY_NAME and ZIPCODE, you could insert this:
The area of [% upper(CITY_NAME) || ',' || ZIPCODE || ' is '
format_number($area/1000000,2) %] km2
or, another combination:
The area of [% upper(CITY_NAME)%],[%ZIPCODE%] is
[%format_number($area/1000000,2) %] km2
The information [% upper(CITY_NAME) || ',' || ZIPCODE || ' is ' format_number($area/1000000,2) %] is an expression used inside the label. Both expressions would result in the generated atlas as:
The area of PARIS,75001 is 1.94 km2
There are several places where you can use a Data Defined Override button to override the selected setting. These options are particularly useful with Atlas Generation.
For the following examples the Regions layer of the QGIS sample dataset is used and selected for Atlas Generation. We also assume the paper format A4 (210X297) is selected in the Composition panel for field Presets.
With a Data Defined Override button you can dynamically set the paper orientation. When the height (north-south) of the extents of a region is greater than its width (east-west), you rather want to use portrait instead of landscape orientation to optimize the use of paper.
In the Composition you can set the field Orientation and select Landscape or Portrait. We want to set the orientation dynamically using an expression depending on the region geometry. Press the button of field Orientation, select Edit... so the Expression string builder dialog opens. Enter the following expression:
CASE WHEN bounds_width($atlasgeometry) > bounds_height($atlasgeometry)
THEN 'Landscape' ELSE 'Portrait' END
Now the paper orients itself automatically. For each Region you need to reposition the location of the composer item as well. For the map item you can use the button of field Width to set it dynamically using following expression:
(CASE WHEN bounds_width($atlasgeometry) > bounds_height($atlasgeometry)
THEN 297 ELSE 210 END) - 20
Use the button of field Height to provide following expression:
(CASE WHEN bounds_width($atlasgeometry) > bounds_height($atlasgeometry)
THEN 210 ELSE 297 END) - 20
When you want to give a title above the map in the center of the page, insert a label item above the map. First use the item properties of the label item to set the horizontal alignment to Center. Next activate from Reference point the upper middle checkbox. You can provide the following expression for field X :
(CASE WHEN bounds_width($atlasgeometry) > bounds_height($atlasgeometry)
THEN 297 ELSE 210 END) / 2
For all other composer items you can set the position in a similar way so they are correctly positioned when the page is automatically rotated in portrait or landscape.
Information provided is derived from the excellent blog (in English and Portuguese) on the Data Defined Override options Multiple_format_map_series_using_QGIS_2.6 .
This is just one example of how you can use the Data Defined Override option.
Once the atlas settings have been configured and composer items (map, table, image...) linked to it, you can create a preview of all the pages by clicking Atlas ‣ Preview Atlas or Preview Atlas icon. You can then use the arrows in the same toolbar to navigate through all the features:
You can also use the combo box to directly select and preview a specific feature. The combo box shows atlas features name according to the expression set in the atlas Page name option.
As for simple compositions, an atlas can be generated in different ways (see Criando um arquivo de Saída for more information). Instead of Composer menu, rather use tools from Atlas menu or Atlas toolbar.
This means that you can directly print your compositions with Atlas ‣ Print Atlas. You can also create a PDF using Atlas ‣ Export Atlas as PDF...: The user will be asked for a directory to save all the generated PDF files, except if the Single file export when possible has been selected. In that case, you’ll be prompted to give a filename.
With Atlas ‣ Export Atlas as Images... or Atlas ‣ Export Atlas as SVG... tool, you’re also prompted to select a folder. Each page of each atlas feature composition is exported to an image or SVG file.
Dica
Print a specific atlas feature
If you want to print or export the composition of only one feature of the atlas, simply start the preview, select the desired feature in the drop-down list and click on Composer ‣ Print (or export... to any supported file format).