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QGIS 2 Cookbook

You're reading from   QGIS 2 Cookbook Become a QGIS power user and master QGIS data management, visualization, and spatial analysis techniques

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Product type Paperback
Published in Apr 2016
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781783984961
Length 390 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Authors (3):
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Anita Graser Anita Graser
Author Profile Icon Anita Graser
Anita Graser
Víctor Olaya Ferrero Víctor Olaya Ferrero
Author Profile Icon Víctor Olaya Ferrero
Víctor Olaya Ferrero
Alex Mandel Alex Mandel
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Alex Mandel
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Data Input and Output 2. Data Management FREE CHAPTER 3. Common Data Preprocessing Steps 4. Data Exploration 5. Classic Vector Analysis 6. Network Analysis 7. Raster Analysis I 8. Raster Analysis II 9. QGIS and the Web 10. Cartography Tips 11. Extending QGIS 12. Up and Coming Index

Working near the dateline

If you read the previous recipe about custom projections, you might have noticed the note about data that crosses the edge of projections and how it doesn't usually render properly. When working on data near -180 or 180 degrees longitude, you are going to have this issue. Maps showing far Eastern Russia, Fiji, New Zealand, and the South Pacific, to name a few places, will often contend with this issue.

The required solution really depends on what you're trying to do. If you just need a map of such areas, pick a locally suitable projection. If you have existing data from other sources, it may be cut along the edge and you might need to stitch it back together. As for worldwide maps, sometimes you have to trim .01 degrees of the edge of your data so that it doesn't display oddly.

Getting ready

To follow this recipe, you will need the honolulu-flights.shp layer and the SpatiaLite database new-zealand.sqlite from the sample data.

How to do it…

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