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PostGIS Cookbook

You're reading from   PostGIS Cookbook Store, organize, manipulate, and analyze spatial data

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2018
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781788299329
Length 584 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
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Authors (6):
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Pedro Wightman Pedro Wightman
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Pedro Wightman
Bborie Park Bborie Park
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Bborie Park
Paolo Corti Paolo Corti
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Paolo Corti
Stephen Vincent Mather Stephen Vincent Mather
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Stephen Vincent Mather
Thomas Kraft Thomas Kraft
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Thomas Kraft
Mayra Zurbarán Mayra Zurbarán
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Mayra Zurbarán
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Toc

Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Moving Data In and Out of PostGIS FREE CHAPTER 2. Structures That Work 3. Working with Vector Data – The Basics 4. Working with Vector Data – Advanced Recipes 5. Working with Raster Data 6. Working with pgRouting 7. Into the Nth Dimension 8. PostGIS Programming 9. PostGIS and the Web 10. Maintenance, Optimization, and Performance Tuning 11. Using Desktop Clients 12. Introduction to Location Privacy Protection Mechanisms 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Rotating geometries


Among the many functions that PostGIS provides, geometry manipulation is a very powerful addition. In this recipe, we will explore a simple example of using the ST_Rotate function to rotate geometries. We will use a function from the Improving proximity filtering with KNN – advanced recipe to calculate our rotation values.

Getting ready

ST_Rotate has a few variants: ST_RotateX, ST_RotateY, and ST_RotateZ, with the ST_Rotate function serving as an alias for ST_RotateZ. Thus, for two-dimensional cases, ST_Rotate is a typical use case.

In the Improving proximity filtering with KNN – advanced recipe, our function calculated the angle to the nearest road from a building's centroid or address point. We can symbolize that building's point according to that rotation factor as a square symbol, but more interestingly, we can explicitly build the area of that footprint in real space and rotate it to match our calculated rotation angle.

How to do it...

Recall our function from the Improving...

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