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Building Mapping Applications with QGIS

You're reading from   Building Mapping Applications with QGIS Create your own sophisticated applications to analyze and display geospatial information using QGIS and Python

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2014
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781783984664
Length 264 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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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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Toc

Table of Contents (11) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with QGIS FREE CHAPTER 2. The QGIS Python Console 3. Learning the QGIS Python API 4. Creating QGIS Plugins 5. Using QGIS in an External Application 6. Mastering the QGIS Python API 7. Selecting and Editing Features in a PyQGIS Application 8. Building a Complete Mapping Application using Python and QGIS 9. Completing the ForestTrails Application Index

Using the layer editing mode


To let the user change the contents of a map layer, you first have to turn on the editing mode for that layer. The layer editing mode is similar to the way transactions are handled in a database:

The changes you make to the layer are held in memory until you decide to either commit the changes to the layer, or roll back the changes to discard them. The following pseudocode is an example of how to implement this using PyQGIS:

layer.startEditing()

# ...make changes...

if modified:
    reply = QMessageBox.question(window, "Confirm",
                                 "Save changes to layer?",
                                 QMessageBox.Yes | QMessageBox.No,
                                 QMessageBox.Yes)
    if reply == QMessageBox.Yes:
        layer.commitChanges()
    else:
        line.rollBack()
else:
     layer.rollBack()

As you can see, we turn on the editing mode for a given map layer by calling layer.startEditing(). As well as set up an internal editing...

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