David J. Bakeman wrote:

Micha Silver wrote:
David J. Bakeman wrote:

I have some shape files that are in seconds rather than decimal
I'm not sure what you mean here. A shapefile is not "in seconds" or "decimal degrees". The geometry part (*.shp) is a binary representation of X-Y coordinates, as simple numbers. If the shapefile also has a *.prj file, then that should contain its projection information. If you have attribute columns (in the *.dbf part of the shapefile) with X-Y coordinates, then you can format these columns any way you like using, for example, Openoffice Calc. But this will *have no effect* on the geographic location of the features in the shapefile. So, the important question is: do the shapefiles overlay correctly? If not, then you need to reproject one shapefile to the projection of the others.
Hope that's clear...
Sorry I didn't make myself clearer. The shapefiles are missing the prj files and the coordinates of the geometry are in seconds for example 72.5 34.5 would be 261000.0 124200.0. I can write a quick program to convert since it's a simple /3600 but it seemed like I should be able to have qgis do it for me if I could figure out the correct proj specification. I have used the transformation plugin in the meantime to scale the data by 1/3600.

That will be a first for me! I've never seen LON/LAT coordinates specified in seconds. If you're lacking a *.prj then you will have to know in advance what CRS these shapefiles are in. Again, if you display them by assuming everything is in Lon/Lat WGS84, do they overlay correctly?

--
Micha Silver
Arava Development Co. +972-52-3665918
http://www.surfaces.co.il


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