hmm, I have to admit I don't really understand what you are trying to do, but
there are some thingsI don't think you really mean. select a.gid,
MIN(ST_Distance(a.centroid, b.the_geom)) AS distance FROM pgfinal2008 a,
cshapes b, cshapes c WHERE a.gwcode != b.gwcode AND b.gwsyear <= 2008 AND
b.gweyear >= 2008 GROUP BY a.gid LIMIT 1;
Why do you have, cshapes c, there. if you have 200 countries in it taking away
that will reduce the querytime to 1/200What you get here is theclosest country
from your first grid cell.
SELECT pgfinal2008.cell, borddisttest2.gid, MIN(borddisttest2.distance) FROM
borddisttest2, pgfinal2008 WHERE borddisttest2.gid = pgfinal2008.gidGROUP BY
pgfinal2008.cell, borddisttest2.gid;
This I don't get. Do you have many rows in pgfinal2008 with the same value in
pgfinal2008.cell but different pgfinal2008.gid. What is "cell"? /Nicklas
2010-10-21 Andreas Forø Tollefsen wrote:
Thanks.>
I have found a way to do this calculation.>
However, since i gave 64818 cells and almost 200 countries, the distance from
every cell to every country is calculated before the minimum distance is
selected.>
This takes awful lot of time.>
>>
Any ideas on how to increase the performance?>
>>
>
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS borddisttest2;>
CREATE TABLE borddisttest2 AS>
select a.gid, MIN(ST_Distance(a.centroid, b.the_geom)) AS distance FROM
pgfinal2008 a, cshapes b, cshapes c WHERE a.gwcode != b.gwcode AND b.gwsyear
<= 2008 AND b.gweyear >= 2008 GROUP BY a.gid LIMIT 1;>
>>
DROP TABLE IF EXISTS borddist2008;>
CREATE TABLE borddist2008 AS>
SELECT pgfinal2008.cell, borddisttest2.gid, MIN(borddisttest2.distance) FROM
borddisttest2, pgfinal2008 WHERE borddisttest2.gid = pgfinal2008.gid>
GROUP BY pgfinal2008.cell, borddisttest2.gid;
>>
2010/10/13 Nicklas Avén <[email protected]>
> >
>Hi> >You can not cast to geography that way (if I haven't missed something
>essential)
> And if you could you would mix geometry and geograph type in ST_Distance,
> which wouldn't work.> >St_Distance for geometry vs geography uses totally
> differnt algorithms. The geography calculations is far more advanced. >
> >ST_Shortestline only works for geometry type.> >/Nicklas>
>
>
> >
> 2010-10-13 Andreas Forø Tollefsen wrote:
>
> Hi>>
> >> >
Thanks,> >
I will give it a try.> >
The reason I used the geography types in the distance query, were to get the
distance in meters instead of degrees.> >
> >> >
Andreas
> >
> >> >
>
>
>
2010/10/13 Nicklas Avén <[email protected]>
> > > >
> >Hi> > > >As I understand you you want to get the distance from each cell to
> >the closest neighbour country. Then, why don't you just query the distance
> >from your cell to closest country with other gwcode?> >Maybe something
> >like:> > > >Create table borddisttest as> >Select
> >ST_Distance(st_collect(b.the_geom), c.centroid)> >from cshapes a, cshapes b,
> >pgfinal2008 c> >where a.gwcode=c.gwcode and b.gwcode != c.gwcode and
> >st_intersects(a.the_geom, b.the_geom)> >group by c.gwcode and c.the_geom;
> >> >With some tweaking like ordering the cells by gwcode I don't think the
> >> >intersection calculation have to be done for each cell. Otherwise this is
> >> >a very bad approach if there are many grid-cells.> > > >indexing on
> >> >gwcode on both tables and spatial index on the country geoms for the
> >> >intersection will also be of importance.> > > >I don't understand:>
> >> >>geography(pgfinal2008.centroid)> > > >what does geography means here?> >
> >> >> >I would also go for calculating the centroids on the fly. It should be
> >> >fast and you will not get the trouble of updating the centroid column if
> >> >adjustuing the grid.> > > >About doing calculations comparing geometries
> >> >inside a dataset you use self join. > > > >You can join a table with
> >> >itself as long as you put an alias so you can identify them like I did
> >> >above with a, b and c> > > >Well, I am not sure I answered the right
> >> >question but anyway...> >HTH> >Nicklas> >
> >
> >
> >
> > 2010-10-13 Andreas Forø Tollefsen wrote:
> >
> > >> >
Hi all,> > >
> > >> > >
I have two datasets. On is a quadrate grid, and the other is the boundaries of
all countries.> > >
What i want to do is to measure the distance from each centroid of the grid
cells to the nearest border, but not all borders. Only the international.> > >
> > >> > >
First i convert my country polygon dataset into line features:> > >
> > >
select gwcode, gwsyear, gweyear, ST_Boundary(the_geom) AS line Into
cshapes_line from cshapes;> > >
> > >> > >
Next i calculate the distance from the centroid of each cell to the nearest
border where the gwcode (country code) of the cell is the same as the gwcode in
the line feature.> > >
drop table if exists borddisttest;> > >
select pgfinal2008.cell, pgfinal2008.gwcode,
ST_ShortestLine(pgfinal2008.centroid, st_boundary(cshapes.the_geom)) > > >
AS shortestline, ST_Distance(geography(pgfinal2008.centroid),
st_boundary(cshapes.the_geom))/1000 AS borddist > > >
into borddisttest > > >
from cshapes, pgfinal2008 > > >
where cshapes.gwcode = pgfinal2008.gwcode;> > >
> > >> > >
The problem here is that when using ST_Boundary, it converts all boundaries
into lines, while i only want to get the boundaries where two polygons with
different gwcodes meet.> > >
The lines where two countries meet are overlapping, meaning these borders have
two gwcodes but in different line entries.> > >
> > >> > >
Is there a way to calculate the overlaps within one dataset? If i could do
this, then i could put a clause so the measurement only measures to lines with
2 or more gwcodes.> > >
> > >> > >
Thanks.
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>>
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> >
> >
> >
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