I'm somehow new in making web services using Openlayers and Javascript. I would like to create a clickable grid layer on top of a map (e.g. OSM) which first has a defined spatial resolution (e.g. 200 m) and of course when user zooms the grid size adapts to the new zoom level of the map. Also I want to show every cell of a grid with a specific colour, and when the user clicks on each cell some information can be shown. So, I guess each cell is like a feature in this layer (e.g. polygon). I was wondering if Openlayers has existing function to do such a thing that I can use, or do I have to code all of it? any help and suggestions on how I can manage to do this would be highly appreciated. Below is a link to a service that has created such a service, I would like to do the same... Thanx.
Link to sample:
Having developed the application you mention in your example, I can give you some hints on your question. The solution is pretty straightforward.
The grid you see, i.e. the coloured hexagons, is simply map tiles, that are served by a custom back-end following the Tile Map Service schema (I used NodeJS) that, in turn, uses Mapnik (any other engine should work as well, e.g. GeoServer or MapServer) for rendering the images. The data is stored in a Postgres data base with PostGIS added on.
Use a client-side library to create the map and add the tiled layer. OpenLayers and Leaflet both do the job well. (Leaflet, though, is a bit easier to grasp if your new to the topic).
On client side you register a click-event handler on the Map, that you can use to get the coordinates of the mouse click. Use these coordinates, send them to your back-end and perform a spatial query on the data base to get the polygons adjacent to the coordinates. The server's response should then provide the geometries of the polygons (encoded in GeoJSON in this case, GML, KML should work fine as well) and whatever information you want to display.
Use these polygons and add them to a vector layer using whatever colour scheme you want.
Have a look at the code to see how it works. The important files are osmatrix.js (connects to the back-end), control.js (main module, keeps track of everything) and map.js (surprisingly enough, everything map-related).