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Python Geospatial Development - Second Edition

You're reading from   Python Geospatial Development - Second Edition If you're experienced in Python here's an opportunity to get deep into Geospatial development, linking data to global locations. No prior knowledge required ‚Äì this book takes you through it all, step by step.

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782161523
Length 508 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Erik Westra Erik Westra
Author Profile Icon Erik Westra
Erik Westra
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Python Geospatial Development
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Geospatial Development Using Python FREE CHAPTER 2. GIS 3. Python Libraries for Geospatial Development 4. Sources of Geospatial Data 5. Working with Geospatial Data in Python 6. GIS in the Database 7. Working with Spatial Data 8. Using Python and Mapnik to Generate Maps 9. Putting It All Together – a Complete Mapping System 10. ShapeEditor – Implementing List View, Import, and Export 11. ShapeEditor – Selecting and Editing Features Index

Creating an example map


To better understand how the various parts of Mapnik work together, let's write a simple Python program, which generates the map shown at the start of this chapter. This map makes use of the World Borders Dataset, which you downloaded in an earlier chapter; copy the TM_WORLD_BORDERS-0.3 shapefile directory into a convenient place, and create a new Python script in the same place. We'll call this program createExampleMap.py.

Tip

Obviously, if you've gotten this far without downloading and installing Mapnik, you need to do so now. Mapnik can be found at http://mapnik.org..

We'll start by importing the Mapnik toolkit and defining some constants, which the program will need:

import mapnik

MIN_LAT  = -35
MAX_LAT  = +35
MIN_LONG = -12
MAX_LONG = +50

MAP_WIDTH  = 700
MAP_HEIGHT = 800

The MIN_LAT, MAX_LAT, MIN_LONG, and MAX_LONG constants define the lat/long coordinates for the portion of the world to display on the map, while the MAP_WIDTH and MAP_HEIGHT constants define the...

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