In principle, this is exactly what GEM was designed for. Download this extension:
http://www.uni-kiel.de/ufg/dateienDucke/DempsterShaferTheory.tar.gz unpack it and take a look inside. It should give you an idea what information to put into the diverse ASCII files and where to copy everything. Benjamin Michaël Rabotin wrote: > Hello Everybody > Thanks to Benjamin Ducke for the response > Now since I've installed GEM, I want to use it for all the scripts I > developped. > I've got 40 perl and shell scripts which are used for landscape > segmentation; Some procedures are independants but the the majority are > used on the control of a principal script. At this time, there is no > graphical interface only a terminal interface. > I want to use GEM to implement my scripts in the gis.m interface, is it > the right way to do it ? > I read the GEM documentation but it's a little harder for me to > understand the whole procedure. Is some already use GEM to do the same > thing and can explain to me some 'tricks' to begin ? > Thanks a lot > Mick > > > -- > M. > > > ------------------------------------------------------------------------ > > _______________________________________________ > grass-user mailing list > [email protected] > http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/grass-user -- Benjamin Ducke, M.A. Archäoinformatik (Archaeoinformation Science) Institut für Ur- und Frühgeschichte (Inst. of Prehistoric and Historic Archaeology) Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel Johanna-Mestorf-Straße 2-6 D 24098 Kiel Germany Tel.: ++49 (0)431 880-3378 / -3379 Fax : ++49 (0)431 880-7300 www.uni-kiel.de/ufg _______________________________________________ grass-user mailing list [email protected] http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/grass-user
