Changes between Initial Version and Version 1 of GeoDjangoBackground


Ignore:
Timestamp:
Jun 2, 2007, 6:15:10 PM (18 years ago)
Author:
jbronn
Comment:

GeoDjango background info now on its own page.

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  • GeoDjangoBackground

    v1 v1  
     1[[TOC]]
     2= GeoDjango Background =
     3The content herein is a loosely structured collection of notes and links that we have found useful, not necessarily what will be supported in the future.  Feel free to add in your own notes, links, and comments.
     4
     5== What's GIS? ==
     6 * [http://cfis.savagexi.com/articles/category/gis Series of blog posts] giving intro to GIS; choice quote from [http://cfis.savagexi.com/articles/2006/04/20/on-coordinate-systems#comments an early post]: "If you feel like ending a conversation with a developer then simply bring up the topic of character encodings ... [o]r ... coordinate systems. ... So in the spirit of Tim Bray's and Joel Spolsky's wonderful writeups of character encodings, I thought I'd put together a basic survival guide to coordinate systems over my next few posts and then tie it back to Google Maps."
     7 * More on [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map_projection map projections], including why people can't agree on just one (utf-8).
     8 * [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geodesy geodesy] the field of science for this stuff.
     9
     10== Useful Code ==
     11 * [http://postgis.refractions.net/ PostGIS], the [http://www.opengis.org/docs/99-049.pdf OpenGIS SQL Types (pdf)] implementation for Postgresql
     12 * [http://geos.refractions.net/ GEOS], low-level C++ port of [http://www.jump-project.org/project.php?PID=JTS Jave Topology Suite], used by PostGIS
     13   * [http://zcologia.com/news/14/python-geos-module/ PyGEOS, now outdated due to PCL, below], and shedloads more stuff on "python, geospatial, and the web"
     14   * [http://gispython.org/ Python Cartographic Library] - [http://trac.gispython.org/projects/PCL actively maintained], huge GIS package, GPL.
     15   * There are direct SWIG Python bindings in GEOS 3.0.0RC1 and above.  In other words, the entire GEOS API may be called directly from Python.
     16 * [http://www.initd.org/tracker/psycopg/wiki/GeoTypes GeoTypes] is a type (and conversion) library for PostGIS via psycopg.
     17 * [http://exogen.case.edu/projects/geopy/ Geopy]
     18   * Calculates distances using (very accurate) [http://www.movable-type.co.uk/scripts/LatLongVincenty.html Vincenty], and uses the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/World_Geodetic_System WGS 84] datum by default.
     19   * Has utility functions for unit of measurement (UOM) conversions (e.g. meters -> kilometers, kilometers -> miles, etc.)
     20   * Excellent GeoCoding capabilites.  Has interfaces for Google, Yahoo, Microsoft Live, MediaWiki, and [http://www.geocoder.us/ Geocoder.us].
     21 * [http://www.gdal.org/ GDAL/OGR], a library for fiddling with raster geo images.
     22   * Has a Python interface.  A SWIG interface is in development, but not yet stable (no access to ''full'' API).
     23   * [http://shapelib.maptools.org/ shapelib] and [http://www.gdal.org/ogr/ogr2ogr.html ogr2ogr] are useful for ESRI shapefile manipulations.  [http://www.esri.com/library/whitepapers/pdfs/shapefile.pdf ESRI shapefiles] are a lingua frana GIS format.
     24 * [http://search.cpan.org/~sderle/Geo-Coder-US/ Geo::Coder::US] An excellent ''Perl'' library for GeoCoding that powers [http://www.geocoder.us/ Geocoder.us].  Users can create their own Geographic databases using the Census Bureau's TIGER/Line data (see below).
     25 * [https://svn.greenpeace.org/projects/custard/browser/doc/geodata GeoRosetta], CC-BY-SA licensed, quality-controlled, collection of geocoding data.  Not yet released to public(?).
     26 * [http://mapserver.gis.umn.edu/ MapServer]: University of Minnesota (UMN) "open source development environment for building spatially-enabled internet applications."
     27 * [http://www.mapnik.org/ Mapnik]: C++ and Python toolkit for developing mapping applications.  Claimed benefits over MapServer: "It uses the AGG library and offers world class anti-aliasing rendering with subpixel accuracy for geographic data. It is written from scratch in modern C++ and doesn't suffer from design decisions made a decade ago." ''See'' [http://www.mapnik.org/faq/ MapNik FAQ].
     28 * [http://code.google.com/p/pyproj/ pyproj]: Pyrex generated python interface to PROJ.4 library.
     29 * Ruby on Rails
     30   * [http://rubyforge.org/projects/georuby/ GeoRuby]: Interface for PostGIS and MySQL spatial extensions, but not sure about spatial querying.
     31   * [http://www.ivygis.org/ IvyGIS]: Google-maps type displays with RoR and UMN's MapServer
     32   * [http://thepochisuperstarmegashow.com/ProjectsDoc/spatialadapter-doc/index.html Spatial Adapter for Rails]: A plugin for Rails which manages the MySql Spatial and PostGIS geometric columns in a transparent way (that is like the other base data type columns).  This might have some useful techniques for when we try to support other spatial extensions other than PostGIS.
     33   * [http://cartographer.rubyforge.org/ Cartographer] GMaps plugin
     34
     35== Useful Data ==
     36 * [http://www.census.gov/geo/www/tiger/tiger2006se/tgr2006se.html TIGER/Line]: "The TIGER/Line files are extracts of selected geographic and cartographic information from the [http://www.census.gov/ Census Bureau's] TIGER®  (Topologically Integrated Geographic Encoding and Referencing) database."  This data is useful in creating your own geocoding database service.  Currently 2006 Second Edition is the latest.  Note: The Census Bureau will be [http://www.census.gov/geo/www/tiger/tgrshp.html providing SHP files] in Fall, 2007. 
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