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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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Toc

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

Executing DEM operations


PostGIS comes with several functions for use on digital elevation model (DEM) rasters to solve terrain-related problems. Though these problems have historically been in the hydrology domain, they can now be found elsewhere, for example, finding the most fuel-efficient route from point A to point B or determining the best location on a roof for a solar panel. PostGIS 2.0 introduced ST_Slope(), ST_Aspect(), and ST_HillShade() while PostGIS 2.1 added the new functions ST_TRI(), ST_TPI(), and ST_Roughness(), and new variants of existing elevation functions.

Getting ready

We will use the SRTM raster, loaded as 100 x 100 tiles, in this chapter's first recipe. With it, we will generate slope and hillshade rasters using San Francisco as our area of interest.

The two queries below use variants of ST_Slope() and ST_HillShade() that are only available in PostGIS 2.1 or higher versions. The new variants permit the specification of a custom extent to constrain the processing area...

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