Thanks! I wasn't aware of that.
Additionally I had to increase layer class maxscale parameter.
Sergey
On Thu, Feb 24, 2011 at 10:33 PM, Jean-François Gigand <
jean-franc...@gigand.fr> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Indeed.
>
> Also note that EPSG:900913 is the same as EPSG:3785 and EPSG:3857.
> These three a
Hi,
Indeed.
Also note that EPSG:900913 is the same as EPSG:3785 and EPSG:3857.
These three are the Spherical Mercator projection, which is the right
one to use for overlays on Google Maps.
Jean-François Gigand
2011/2/24 Fawcett, David (MPCA) :
> Sergey,
>
>
>
> If your data is in epsg:4326
Sergey,
If your data is in epsg:4326 and you want to publish the data as epsg:3785, you
will need to projection blocks to your layers.
Something like:
PROJECTION
"init=epsg:4326"
END
The Projection block in the MAP section defines your output projection.
Because your data is n