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Mastering PostGIS

You're reading from   Mastering PostGIS Modern ways to create, analyze, and implement spatial data

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781784391645
Length 328 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (4):
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George Silva George Silva
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George Silva
 Mikiewicz Mikiewicz
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Mikiewicz
Michal Mackiewicz Michal Mackiewicz
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Michal Mackiewicz
 Nycz Nycz
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Nycz
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Toc

Table of Contents (9) Chapters Close

1. Importing Spatial Data FREE CHAPTER 2. Spatial Data Analysis 3. Data Processing - Vector Ops 4. Data Processing - Raster Ops 5. Exporting Spatial Data 6. ETL Using Node.js 7. PostGIS – Creating Simple WebGIS Applications 8. PostGIS Topology 9. pgRouting

Chapter 2. Spatial Data Analysis

So far, we have learned how to store geospatial data in a PostGIS database. In fact, any database management system can do that; spatial information can be encoded and stored in an ordinary DBMS-friendly format, be it blob, byte array, or text-based exchange format. What makes the spatial database special (and the PostGIS extension worth installing) is the rich toolset designed for analyzing, transforming, validating, querying, and extracting metrics from spatial information. In this chapter, we will learn how to harness the power of PostGIS spatial functions to gain meaningful insights from geodata. We will focus on the following topics:

  • Composing and decomposing geometries
  • Spatial measurement
  • Geometry bounding boxes
  • Geometry simplification
  • Geometry validation
  • Intersecting geometries
  • Nearest feature queries

The example queries used in this chapter mostly use geometries created by hand, using geometry composition functions. For a few examples, the OSM data in osm2pgsql...

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