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QGIS Python Programming Cookbook, Second Edition

You're reading from   QGIS Python Programming Cookbook, Second Edition Automating geospatial development

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781787124837
Length 464 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Author (1):
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Joel Lawhead Joel Lawhead
Author Profile Icon Joel Lawhead
Joel Lawhead
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Table of Contents (10) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Automating QGIS FREE CHAPTER 2. Querying Vector Data 3. Editing Vector Data 4. Using Raster Data 5. Creating Dynamic Maps 6. Composing Static Maps 7. Interacting with the User 8. QGIS Workflows 9. Other Tips and Tricks

Preface

The open source geographic information system QGIS at version 2 now rivals even the most expensive commercial GIS software in both functionality and usability. It is also a showcase of the best geospatial open source technology available. It is not just a project in itself but the marriage of dozens of open source projects in a single, clean interface. 

Geospatial technology is not just the application of technology to geography. It is a symphony of geography, mathematics, computer science, statistics, physics, and other fields. The underlying algorithms implemented by QGIS are so complex that only a handful of people in the world understand them all.  Yet QGIS packages all of this complexity so well that school children, city managers, disease researchers, geologists, and many other professionals wield this powerful software with ease to make decisions that improve life on Earth.

But this book is about another feature of QGIS that makes it the best choice for geospatial work. QGIS has one of the most deeply integrated and well-designed Python interfaces of any software period. In the latest version, there is virtually no aspect of the program that is off-limits to Python, making it the largest geospatial Python library available. Almost without exception, the Python API, called PyQGIS, is consistent and predictable.

This book exploits the best features of QGIS to demonstrate over 170 reusable recipes that you can use to automate workflows in QGIS or build standalone GIS applications. Most recipes are very compact and have less than 20 lines of code. Even if you can’t find the exact solution you are looking for, you should be able to get very close. This book covers a lot of ground and pulls together fragmented ideas and documentation scattered throughout the Internet as well as the results of many hours of experimenting at the edges of the PyQGIS API.

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