On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 11:20 PM, P Kishor <punk.k...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Wed, Sep 15, 2010 at 11:13 PM, Bob Basques <bo...@gritechnologies.com> > wrote: >> Hmm, the help file doesn't say much does it. Did you try using a thrid >> file name on the end instead of b.tif (again)? >> > > Seems like the following works > > geotifcp -g a.tif b.tif c.tif > > creating an extra file c.tif. What a shame. Now, to figure out if I > can apply this blessed proj info to 100 files in one shot or not, and > then delete 100 old files. > > Also, I wish these darned commands were named consistently. When I see > `geotifcp` I think of its analog as `geotifls`, and when I see > `listgeo` I think of its analog as `copygeo`. What a shame its not so. > > > >> bobb >> >> >> >> On 9/15/2010 4:07 PM, P Kishor wrote: >>> >>> I have a file a.tif with correct proj info embedded in it. I have >>> another file b.tif with no proj info in it. I want to take the proj >>> info within a.tif and embed it into b.tif. When I try the following -- >>> >>> geotifcp -g a.tif b.tif b.tif >>> >>> my b.tif goes from around 321K to 8 bytes. Obviously that is no good, >>> but I can't, for the life me, intuit what the usage would be. >>> >>> Corollary -- I have about a 100 target tifs... b_1.tif, b_2.tif, and >>> so on. I would really like to embed the proj info from a.tif into all >>> of the b_?.tif so what would that usage be? >>> >>> >>
A little more on geotifcp. It doesn't really have an explicit usage/help switch, but if I type just the command, I get the usage description. There is a typo in it, however $geotifcp usage: gtiffcp [options] input... output huh! What the heck is `gtiffcp` ? $gtiffcp -bash: gtiffcp: command not found -- Puneet Kishor _______________________________________________ Discuss mailing list Discuss@lists.osgeo.org http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/discuss