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PostGIS Cookbook

You're reading from   PostGIS Cookbook For web developers and software architects this book will provide a vital guide to the tools and capabilities available to PostGIS spatial databases. Packed with hands-on recipes and powerful concepts

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2014
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781849518666
Length 484 pages
Edition Edition
Languages
Tools
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

PostGIS Cookbook
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Moving Data In and Out of PostGIS FREE CHAPTER 2. Structures that Work 3. Working with Vector Data – The Basics 4. Working with Vector Data – Advanced Recipes 5. Working with Raster Data 6. Working with pgRouting 7. Into the Nth Dimension 8. PostGIS Programming 9. PostGIS and the Web 10. Maintenance, Optimization, and Performance Tuning 11. Using Desktop Clients Index

Using triggers to populate a geometry column


In this recipe, we imagine that we have ongoing updates to our database, which needs spatial representation; however, in this case, we want a hard-coded geometry column to be updated each time an INSERT operation takes place on the database, converting our x and y values to geometry as they are inserted in the database.

The advantage of this approach is that the geometry is then registered in the geometry_columns view, and therefore this approach works reliably with more PostGIS client types than creating a geospatial view. This also provides the advantage of allowing for a spatial index that can significantly speed up a variety of queries. The disadvantage for users using PostgreSQL versions lower than Version 9.0 is that, without a WHERE clause within the trigger, every time an insert takes place, the trigger will be calculated on all points to create geometry. This method could be very expensive on large datasets. However, for users of PostgreSQL...

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