Sure. You can use:
for v in geom.asPolyline(): print v.x(), v.y() asPolyline returns QVector<QgsPoint> which is just a List of QgsPoints in Python. Access like normal - Nathan On Sun, May 13, 2012 at 9:48 PM, Ricardo Filipe Soares Garcia da <ricardo.garcia.si...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi list > > I'm trying to translate and rotate a geometry using python, in order > to create parallel lines. > > For the translation I could use QgsGeometry's translate() method, but > for the rotation I haven't found a ready-made solution. So my current > strategy is to individually rotate each vertex, according to a > specified angle and length. For this i'd like to iterate over the > geometry's vertices. > > The problem seems to be that the api methods that return vertex > coordinates (vertexAt(), adjacentVertices, ...) always return a value > even if the specified vertex index is wrong. For example, if I use a > geometry with 5 vertices and call: > > geometry.vertexAt(100) > > -> (0,0) > > I cannot know if there is a vertex placed at the (0, 0) coordinates or > if there is no vertex at all. > Is there some way to iterate over a geometry's vertices? Or maybe get > an exception when asking for an invalid one? > > Thanks > > > -- > ___________________________ ___ __ > Ricardo Garcia Silva > _______________________________________________ > Qgis-developer mailing list > Qgis-developer@lists.osgeo.org > http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-developer _______________________________________________ Qgis-developer mailing list Qgis-developer@lists.osgeo.org http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/qgis-developer