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QGIS:Becoming a GIS Power User

You're reading from   QGIS:Becoming a GIS Power User Master data management, visualization, and spatial analysis techniques in QGIS and become a GIS power user

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Product type Course
Published in Feb 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788299725
Length 819 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (4):
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Anita Graser Anita Graser
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Anita Graser
Víctor Olaya Ferrero Víctor Olaya Ferrero
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Víctor Olaya Ferrero
Alex Mandel Alex Mandel
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Alex Mandel
Ben Mearns Ben Mearns
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Ben Mearns
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Toc

What you need for this learning path

Module 1:

To follow the exercises in this book, you need QGIS 2.14. QGIS installation is covered in the first chapter and download links for the exercise data are provided in the respective chapters.

Module 2:

You will need:

  • QGIS 2.10
  • A computer running OS X, Windows, or Linux

Module 3:

We recommend installing QGIS 2.8 or later; you will need at least QGIS 2.4. During the writing of this book, several new versions were released, approximately every 4 months, and most recently, 2.14 was released. Most of the recipes will work on older versions, but some may require 2.6 or newer. In general, if you can, upgrade to the latest stable release or Long Term Support (LTS) version.

There are also a lot of side interactions with other software throughout many of these

recipes, including—but not limited to—Postgis 2+, GRASS 6.4+, SAGA 2.0.8+, and Spatialite 4+. On Windows, most of these can be installed using OSGeo4W; on Mac, you may need some additional frameworks from Kyngchaos, or if you’re familiar with Brew, you can use the OSGeo4Mac Tap. For Linux users, in particular Ubuntu and Debian, refer to the UbuntuGIS PPA and the DebianGIS blend.

Does all of this sound a little too complicated? If yes, then consider using a virtual machine that runs OSGeo-Live (http://live.osgeo.org). All the software is preinstalled for you and is known to work together.

Lastly, you will need data. For the most part, we’ve provided a lot of free and open data

from a variety of sources, including the OSGeo Educational dataset (North Carolina), Natural Earth Data, OpenFlights, Wake County, City of Davis, and Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project (ACLED). A full list of our data sources is provided here if you would like additional data.

We recommend that you try methods with the sample data first, only because we tested it.

Feel free to try using your own data to test many of the recipes; however, just remember that you might need to alter the structure to make it work. After all, that’s what you’ll be working with normally.

The following are the data sources for this book:

OSGeo Educational Data: http://grass.osgeo.org/download/sample-data/

Wake County, USA: http://www.wakegov.com/gis/services/pages/data.aspx

Natural Earth Data: http://www.naturalearthdata.com/

City of Davis, USA: http://maps.cityofdavis.org/library

Stamen Designs: http://stamen.com/

Armed Conflict Location & Event Data Project: http://www.acleddata.com/

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