Hi Stefan, Thank you very much for your answer and the documentation! I was able to write my addon thanks to it :)
Have a nice day, Camille Le jeu. 14 janv. 2021 à 21:39, Stefan Blumentrath < [email protected]> a écrit : > Hi Camille, > > > > Great resources to start with are: > > wenzeslaus/python-grass-addon: How to write a Python GRASS GIS 7 addon > (github.com) <https://github.com/wenzeslaus/python-grass-addon> > > and > > wenzeslaus/r.example.plus: An example of a GRASS GIS module for processing > rasters (github.com) <https://github.com/wenzeslaus/r.example.plus> > > > > If you want your module to return not maps or tables but output on stdout > (what read_command() captures), just use the print() function in python. > > > > Hope that helps to get started!? > > > > If there is a module that has a UI that could be a good template for what > you want to do, you can use e.g. “r.info –script” to get a script > template for the UI and general content. > > > > Cheers > > Stefan > > > > > > *From:* grass-user <[email protected]> *On Behalf Of *Cam > Morlus > *Sent:* torsdag 14. januar 2021 21:23 > *To:* [email protected] > *Subject:* [GRASS-user] How to create a GRASS addon that returns > something when using read_command() > > > > Dear All, > > > > I am using grass 7.8.4. I'm calling commands externally using the Grass > Python Scripting Library in Python. I wanted to know when you create an > addon in python how to end the addon script so that when you call that > addon with read_command() it returns something. I would like to have > something similar to what happens when calling read_command(g.gisenv) which > returns the grass variables settings so that you can store them into a > variable. > > > > Thank you in advance for your answer. > > > > Best, > > > > Camille Morlighem >
_______________________________________________ grass-user mailing list [email protected] https://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/grass-user
