Hi,

I'm trying to come up with an approach using Postgis to come up with a polygon 
representing the outer bounds of a set of points, ie: a polygon passing through 
all the outer points.

Much useful info (as usual - thanks guys!!) at spatialdbadvisor & bostongis but 
my limited understanding is stalling progress for now.

I came across the ST_Concavehull() function, which fails. Indeed, I was 
surprised to see this actually expands the polygon extent representing the 
point set, as shown at:
http://www.bostongis.com/postgis_concavehull.snippet as this buffers the points 
in some cases, and often gives quite unexpected (to me anyway) results. 

Looking for something that fits better, using existing capabilities, I figured 
I could pretty easily use Delaunay triangulation to create the outer hull, then 
realised this bridges every second outer point (pretty much by definition). 
That's easy, just remove any triangles from the polygon where they share a line 
segment with the polygon. I like Postgis!!

I have Simon's code working fine, at least using his example invocation, from:
http://www.spatialdbadvisor.com/postgis_tips_tricks/290/r-based-delaunay-triangulation-function-for-postgis-using-the-deldir-package

But I can't figure out how to make it work with my point data. I don't know R 
or PL/R well enough to adapt it.

I have a set of sample points in a table:

  Column |      Type       |                                   
 --------+-----------------+-----------------
  id     | integer         | not null default
  geom   | geometry(Point) | 

Can anyone explain, ideally in words of one syllable or less, how Simon's 
function from the link above needs to be adapted to read my points dataset as 
input?

Once I get the triangles as an output set I can use Postgis for the rest...

Thanks,

   Brent Wood


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