The Big Picture
Imagine you are looking at your neighborhood from a plane. When you are high up, you see big roads but not small paths. As you fly lower, more streets appear. This is how maps work. They change what they show based on how zoomed in you are.
Making Choices
Maps have to make hard choices. Sometimes two tiny streets are so close together that showing both would look like a scribble. So the map merges them into one line. This process is called simplification. It keeps the important shapes without making the paper too cluttered.
Symbol Magic
Not everything needs a picture. A big city might be drawn as a circle instead of a whole building shape. A winding river might look like a smooth snake on a small map but get jagged edges on a large one. This is abstraction. The map uses symbols to save space while still telling you the truth about where things are.
Examples
- A toy car driving over a piece of paper shows big bumps but smooth hills.
- A subway map uses straight lines instead of curving tracks to make the route easier to follow.
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See also
- How Does Azimuthal Equidistant Projection [defined] Work?
- How Do Maps Lie About the Size of Countries?
- Can a geodesic always be extended?
- How are Angles Measured in Degrees? | Don't Memorise?
- Can black holes send information back in time?