Note: This document is for an older version of GRASS GIS that will be discontinued soon. You should upgrade, and read the current manual page.
NAME
r.what - Queries raster maps on their category values and category labels.
KEYWORDS
raster,
querying,
position
SYNOPSIS
r.what
r.what --help
r.what [-nfricv] map=name[,name,...] [coordinates=east,north] [points=name] [null_value=string] [output=name] [separator=character] [cache=integer] [--overwrite] [--help] [--verbose] [--quiet] [--ui]
Flags:
- -n
- Output header row
- -f
- Show the category labels of the grid cell(s)
- -r
- Output color values as RRR:GGG:BBB
- -i
- Output integer category values, not cell values
- -c
- Turn on cache reporting
- -v
- Show the category for vector points map
- --overwrite
- Allow output files to overwrite existing files
- --help
- Print usage summary
- --verbose
- Verbose module output
- --quiet
- Quiet module output
- --ui
- Force launching GUI dialog
Parameters:
- map=name[,name,...] [required]
- Name of existing raster map(s) to query
- coordinates=east,north
- Coordinates for query
- points=name
- Name of vector points map for query
- Or data source for direct OGR access
- null_value=string
- String representing NULL value
- Default: *
- output=name
- Name for output file (if omitted or "-" output to stdout)
- separator=character
- Field separator
- Special characters: pipe, comma, space, tab, newline
- Default: pipe
- cache=integer
- Size of point cache
- Default: 500
r.what outputs the category values and (optionally) the category
labels associated with user-specified locations on raster input map(s).
Locations are specified as geographic x,y coordinate pairs (i.e., pair of
eastings and northings); the user can also (optionally) associate a label
with each location.
The input coordinates can be entered directly on the command line
via coordinates parameter, or redirected via stdin
from an input text file, script, or piped from another program
(like v.out.ascii). Coordinates
can be given also as a vector points map (points).
If none of the above input methods are used and the module is run from the
terminal prompt, the program will interactively query the user for point
locations and labels.
Each line of the input consists of an easting, a northing, and an optional
label, which are separated by spaces. In interactive mode, the word
"end" must be typed after the last pair of input coordinates.
r.what output consists of the input geographic location and label,
and, for each user-named raster map layer, the category value, and (if
the -f label flag is specified) the category label associated with
the cell(s) at this geographic location.
The module's
coordinates parameter can be used to enter coordinate
pairs directly. The maximum number of pairs will be limited by your system's
maximum input line length (e.g. 4096 characters).
g.region raster=landuse96_28m,aspect -p
r.what map=landuse96_28m,aspect coordinates=633614.08,224125.12,632972.36,225382.87 -f
633614.08|224125.12||2|Low Intensity Developed|209.5939|209 degrees ccw from east
632972.36|225382.87||15|Southern Yellow Pine|140.7571|140 degrees ccw from east
Coordinates can be read from existing vector points map by
specifying
points option. Other features than points or
centroids are ignored. Example: query North Carolina county number for
each community college:
g.region raster=boundary_county_500m -p
r.what map=boundary_county_500m points=comm_colleges
145096.859150|154534.264884||39
616341.437150|146049.750884||51
...
Coordinates can be read from existing vector points map by
specifying
points option. Other features than points or
centroids are ignored. Using the
v flag you can get also
the cat for each feature. Example: query North Carolina county
number for each community college:
g.region raster=boundary_county_500m -p
r.what map=boundary_county_500m points=comm_colleges -v
1|145096.859150|154534.264884||39
2|616341.437150|146049.750884||51
...
Coordinates can be read from existing vector points map by
specifying
points option. Other features than points or
centroids are ignored. The output is stored in a CSV file including header
row. Example: query North Carolina county number for each community college:
g.region raster=boundary_county_500m -p
r.what map=boundary_county_500m points=comm_colleges \
separator=comma output=result.csv -n
cat result.csv
easting,northing,site_name,boundary_county_500m
145096.859150,154534.264884,,39
616341.437150,146049.750884,,51
410595.719150,174301.828884,,71
...
The contents of an ASCII text file can be redirected to
r.what
as follows. If we have a file called
input_coord.txt containing the
whitespace separated coordinates and optionally labels, the resulting
raster map values are extracted:
cat input_coord.txt
633614.08 224125.12 site 1
632972.36 225382.87 site 2
r.what map=landuse96_28m,aspect < input_coord.txt
633614.08|224125.12|site 1|2|209.5939
632972.36|225382.87|site 2|15|140.7571
Input coordinates may be given directly from standard input (
stdin),
for example (input data appears between the "
EOF" markers):
r.what map=landuse96_28m,aspect << EOF
633614.08 224125.12 site 1
632972.36 225382.87 site 2
EOF
633614.08|224125.12|site 1|2|209.5939
632972.36|225382.87|site 2|15|140.7571
echo "633614.08 224125.12" | r.what map=landuse96_28m,aspect
633614.08|224125.12||2|209.5939
The input coordinates may be "piped" from the standard output
(
stdout) of another program. In the next example, vector
point coordinates are piped from the
v.out.ascii module.
v.out.ascii comm_colleges separator=space | r.what map=boundary_county_500m
145096.8591495|154534.26488388|1|39
616341.4371495|146049.75088388|2|51
410595.7191495|174301.82888388|3|71
...
Here we use the
-f label flag to enable the output of category labels
associated with the raster cell(s), as well as values (categorical maps only).
r.what -f map=landuse96_28m,aspect << EOF
633614.08 224125.12 site 1
632972.36 225382.87 site 2
EOF
633614.08|224125.12|site 1|2|Low Intensity Developed|209.5939|209 degrees ccw from east
632972.36|225382.87|site 2|15|Southern Yellow Pine|140.7571|140 degrees ccw from east
The maximum number of raster map layers that can be queried at one time is 400.
r.category,
r.report,
r.stats,
r.series,
r.univar,
v.what,
v.what.rast,
v.what.vect
Michael Shapiro, U.S. Army Construction Engineering Research Laboratory
Vector point input added by Martin Landa, Czech Technical University in Prague, Czech Republic
SOURCE CODE
Available at:
r.what source code
(history)
Latest change: Mon Nov 18 20:15:32 2019 in commit: 1a1d107e4f6e1b846f9841c2c6fabf015c5f720d
Note: This document is for an older version of GRASS GIS that will be discontinued soon. You should upgrade, and read the current manual page.
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GRASS Development Team,
GRASS GIS 7.8.8dev Reference Manual