NAME
r.in.poly - Creates raster maps from ASCII polygon/line/point data files.
KEYWORDS
raster,
import
SYNOPSIS
r.in.poly
r.in.poly --help
r.in.poly input=name output=name [title=phrase] [type=string] [null=integer] [rows=integer] [--overwrite] [--help] [--verbose] [--quiet] [--ui]
Flags:
- --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:
- input=name [required]
- Name of input file; or "-" to read from stdin
- output=name [required]
- Name for output raster map
- title=phrase
- Title for resultant raster map
- type=string
- Type of raster map to be created
- Storage type for resultant raster map
- Options: CELL, FCELL, DCELL
- Default: CELL
- CELL: Integer
- FCELL: Single precision floating point
- DCELL: Double precision floating point
- null=integer
- Integer representing NULL value data cell
- rows=integer
- Number of rows to hold in memory
- Default: 4096
r.in.poly allows the creation of GRASS binary
raster maps from ASCII files in the current directory
containing polygon, linear, and point features.
The input file is an ASCII text file containing the
polygon, linear, and point feature definitions.
The format of this file is described in the
INPUT FORMAT section below.
The number of raster rows to hold in memory is per default 4096.
This parameter allows users with less memory (or more) on their
system to control how much memory r.in.poly uses.
Usually the default value is fine.
The data will be imported using the current region settings to set the
new raster map's bounds and resolution. Any features falling outside
the current region will be cropped. The region settings are contolled
with the g.region module.
The format is a simplified version of the standard GRASS vector ASCII
format used by v.in.ascii.
Polygons are filled, i.e. they define an area.
The input format for the
input file consists of
sections describing either polygonal areas, linear features, or
point features. The basic format is:
A <for polygonal areas>
easting northing
.
.
.
= cat# label
L <for linear features>
easting northing
.
.
.
= cat# label
P <for single cell point features>
easting northing
= cat# label
The
A signals the beginning of a filled polygon.
It must appear in the first column.
The
L signals the beginning of a linear feature.
It also must appear in the first column.
The
P signals the beginning of a single cell point feature.
Again, it must appear in the first column.
The coordinates of the vertices of the polygon, or the coordinates defining
the linear or point feature follow and must have a space in the first
column and at least one space between the
easting and the
northing. To give meaning to the features, the
"
=" indicates that the feature currently being
processed has category value
cat# (which must be
an integer) and a
label (which may be more than
one word, or which may be omitted).
An area described by four points:
A
591316.80 4926455.50
591410.25 4926482.40
591434.60 4926393.60
591341.20 4926368.70
= 42 stadium
r.colors,
d.rast.edit,
g.region,
r.in.xyz,
r.patch,
v.in.ascii,
wxGUI vector digitizer
Michael Shapiro, U.S.Army Construction Engineering Research Laboratory
SOURCE CODE
Available at:
r.in.poly source code
(history)
Latest change: Sunday Jan 22 14:14:43 2023 in commit: c38dd6cc90286c8213ace4b6e002caa9de6a771c
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© 2003-2023
GRASS Development Team,
GRASS GIS 8.3.dev Reference Manual