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Geoapplications development
http://rgeo.wikience.org
Higher School of Economics, Moscow, www.cs.hse.ru
Agenda 2
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Set of core geometries 3
http://www.geopackage.org/spec/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Well-known_text
ISO 19107 4
Following on the addition of Envelope classes, there is a tiny introduction to the most basic ISO 19107 (geometry) objects. The root of all geometric objects in ISO 19107 is GM_Object. But GeoAPI uses the Geometry name instead. There are two objects representing points in ISO 19107: • GM_Point (simply named Point in GeoAPI) is a GM_Object (GeoAPI: Geometry) sub-type. Like every
geometries, it may be relatively heavy depending on the geometry library implementation. • DirectPosition is a lightweight structure containing only ordinate values associated to a Coordinate
Reference System (CRS). DirectPosition are *not* geometries in the classes hierarchy. • In C/C++, Position is a /union/ (in the C/C++ sense) of GM_Point and DirectPosition, allowing the
same API to work with one or other type. Since unions do not exist in Java, GeoAPI simulate the union effect by defining Position as a parent interface of both Point and DirectPosition.
In ISO 19107, Envelope is simply defined by the DirectPosition of 2 corners. Like DirectPosition, Envelope is a relatively lightweight structure, not a geometry sub-type. GeoAPI and SIS define many additional methods for envelopes, but the internal structure stay lightweight: only the corner ordinate values and the CRS. http://mail-archives.apache.org/mod_mbox/sis-dev/201212.mbox/%[email protected]%3E
The base type for all types in this package is not Geometry
LineString (Open GIS) 5
package org.opengis.geometry.coordinate; import …; /** …skipped… */ @UML(identifier="GM_LineString", specification=ISO_19107) public interface LineString extends CurveSegment { /** * Returns a sequence of positions between which the curve is linearly interpolated. * The first position in the sequence is the {@linkplain #getStartPoint start Point} * of this {@code LineString}, and the last point in the sequence is the * {@linkplain #getEndPoint end point} of this {@code LineString}. * * @return The control points between which the curve is linearly interpolated. */ @UML(identifier="controlPoint", obligation=MANDATORY, specification=ISO_19107) PointArray getControlPoints(); /** * Decomposes a line string into an equivalent sequence of line segments. * * @return The sequence of line segments. */ @UML(identifier="asGM_LineSegment", obligation=MANDATORY, specification=ISO_19107) List<LineSegment> asLineSegments(); }
org.geotools:gt-opengis:13-SNAPSHOT2
LineString (Java Topology Suite) 6
com.vividsolutions:jts:1.132
/* ... skipped ... */
package com.vividsolutions.jts.geom;
import com.vividsolutions.jts.algorithm.CGAlgorithms;
import com.vividsolutions.jts.operation.BoundaryOp;
/**
* Models an OGC-style <code>LineString</code>.
* A LineString consists of a sequence of two or more vertices,
* ... skipped …
*/
public class LineString extends Geometry implements Lineal {
private static final long serialVersionUID = 3110669828065365560L;
/**
* The points of this <code>LineString</code>.
*/
protected CoordinateSequence points;
/* ... skipped ... */
}
JTS TestBuilder 7
BTW, it is an example of a very good, proven software: •197 Downloads (This Week) •Last Update: 2013-05-30
For Windows just run testbuilder.bat; how to setup under MacOS: http://blog.perrygeo.net/2010/05/06/exploring-geometry/
An easy way to visualize your geometries and get feeling of operations with them
List of operation types on geometries 8
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WKT Specification 9
Polygon Example: POLYGON ((200 300, 600 300, 600 100, 200 100, 200 300), (250 250, 350 250, 350 150, 250 150, 250 250), (400 250, 550 250, 550 200, 400 200, 400 250))
Shell
First is shell, everything next are holes
Holes
Geometry validation 10
Q: The syntax is correct, but what really happens to this polygon? POLYGON ((10 40, 60 40, 60 10, 10 10, 10 40), (20 35, 50 35, 50 20, 20 20, 20 35), (30 30, 40 30, 40 15, 30 15, 30 30))
Answer: polygon defined incorrectly (see SPECs in readings)
Geometry validation (2) 11
Polygon holes must not overlap with each other
Geometry validation 12
Q: The syntax is correct, but what really happens to this polygon? POLYGON ((130 300, 400 300, 400 200, 130 200, 130 300), (300 300, 400 300, 400 200, 300 200, 300 300))
Answer: polygon defined incorrectly (see SPECs in readings)
Geometry validation 13
Q: The syntax is correct, but what really happens to this polygon? POLYGON ((130 300, 400 300, 400 200, 130 200, 130 300), (400 270, 400 230, 310 230, 310 270, 400 270))
Answer: polygon defined incorrectly (see SPECs in readings)
Set-oriented operations 14
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DE-9IM
English Russian
Set-oriented operations: insights 15
What is the Union result for polygons below? POLYGON ((35 10, 45 45, 15 40, 10 20, 35 10), (20 30, 35 35, 30 20, 20 30)) POLYGON ((26.4 29.5, 30.5 30.9, 30 26, 26.4 29.5)) Result: MULTIPOLYGON (((35 10, 10 20, 15 40, 45 45, 35 10), (20 30, 30 20, 35 35, 20 30)), ((26.4 29.5, 30.5 30.9, 30 26, 26.4 29.5)))
JTS operations on geometries 16
http://www.vividsolutions.com/jts/javadoc/com/vividsolutions/jts/geom/Geometry.html
import com.vividsolutions.jts.geom.Geometry; import com.vividsolutions.jts.geom.GeometryFactory; import com.vividsolutions.jts.geom.Polygon; import com.vividsolutions.jts.io.ParseException; import com.vividsolutions.jts.io.WKTReader; import org.geotools.geometry.jts.JTSFactoryFinder; GeometryFactory geometryFactory = JTSFactoryFinder.getGeometryFactory(null); WKTReader reader = new WKTReader( geometryFactory ); Polygon polygonA = (Polygon) reader.read("POLYGON ((35 10, 45 45, 15 40, 10 20, 35 10))"); Polygon polygonB = (Polygon) reader.read("POLYGON ((20 30, 35 35, 30 20, 20 30))"); Geometry result = polygonA.difference(polygonB); System.out.println(result);
Discussion 18
GEOMETRYCOLLECTION ( POLYGON ((25 35, 35 37, 38 31, 29 25, 25 35)), LINESTRING (39 39, 30 43, 23 44), POINT (22 40), POINT (19 37), POINT (21 34), POINT (18 32), POINT (17 34), POINT (20 40)) // next slides show how to build this visually
“closure” property 19
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Polygon polygonA = (Polygon) reader.read("POLYGON ((35 10, 45 45, 15 40, 10 20, 35 10))"); Polygon polygonB = (Polygon) reader.read("POLYGON ((20 30, 35 35, 30 20, 20 30))"); Geometry result = polygonA.difference(polygonB); // POLYGON ((35 10, 45 45, 15 40, 10 20, 35 10), (20 30, 35 35, 30 20, 20 30)) // see course site for Java code and Maven pom.xml
Empty features & Collections 20
GEOMETRYCOLLECTION can combine all other types
Reprojection 21
MathTransform transform = CRS.findMathTransform(crsFeatures, crsMap, true);
geometry = JTS.transform(geometry, transform);
CoordinateReferenceSystem crs = CRS.decode("EPSG:32637"); String wkt = crs.toWKT(); System.out.println(wkt);
Buffer 22
https://desktop.arcgis.com/en/desktop/latest/manage-data/using-sql-with-gdbs/spatial-operation-functions-for-st-geometry.htm
Geometry buffer = polygon.buffer(10); System.out.println(buffer);
Buffer: insights 23
Affine transformations 24
// AFFINE TRANSFORMATIONS, view results at JTS TestBuilder result.apply(AffineTransformation.rotationInstance(30)); System.out.println(result); // or several transformations at once AffineTransformation transformation = AffineTransformation.scaleInstance(2, 2). compose(AffineTransformation.rotationInstance(45)). compose(AffineTransformation.translationInstance(10, 10)); result.apply(transformation); System.out.println(result);
Line simplification 25
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http://www.caliper.com/MAPTITUDE/GPS/default.htm http://www.namekdev.net/2014/06/iterative-version-of-ramer-douglas-peucker-line-simplification-algorithm
Readings 26