The file contains the satellite photo height data one area,in my case,it
contains the areas of two case.
在2010-06-02 17:33:10,Chaitanya kumar CH chaitanya...@gmail.com 写道:
Which file is that?
2010/6/2 甘肃。思远 weixj200...@163.com
Thk u for your answer.
Maybe I have not descript my question
You might want to look here for the 90m SRTM data of most of the world:
http://srtm.csi.cgiar.org/SELECTION/inputCoord.asp
It was quite slow when I visited it just now, but it's worth persevering.
If you want higher resolution data, you will have to look elsewhere.
-JD
Does anyone have built/compiled 64 bit versions of either FWTools or gdal for:
a.) Windows 64 bit
b.) Linux 64 bit
Thanks,
John
--
John J. Mitchell
___
gdal-dev mailing list
gdal-dev@lists.osgeo.org
http://lists.osgeo.org/mailman/listinfo/gdal-dev
On Tue, Jun 1, 2010 at 4:55 PM, Pierre Racine
pierre.rac...@sbf.ulaval.ca wrote:
Try with GDAL 1.7.1 instead... this is the I could compile with
(--without-libtool).
Many thanks, Pierre. At the end, it compiled with GDAL 1.7.1. Now, the
problem is a pretty
ERROR: could not load library
Frank Warmerdam kirjoitti:
John Mitchell wrote:
Does anyone have built/compiled 64 bit versions of either FWTools or
gdal for:
a.) Windows 64 bit
John,
Tamas maintains win64 builds at:
http://vbkto.dyndns.org/sdk/
b.) Linux 64 bit
I'm not aware of 64bit builds except possibly
Yes Frank,
This is exactly where I am.
I got GeoTools to interpret a generic TYPE in a CSV file and generate
shapefiles (this is a starters tutorial...)
Now I want to move from a generic TYPE to a GeoJSON grammar interpreter
that would input into the GeoTools shapefile facility.
I just
Perhaps not an IDE as most people think of them, but it is certainly a
useful tool with some IDE qualities: Leo Outlining Editor -
http://webpages.charter.net/edreamleo/front.html
cheers,
matt wilkie
Geomatics Analyst
Information Management and
On Wed, Jun 2, 2010 at 5:21 AM, christian.muel...@nvoe.at wrote:
Hi, I am also a fan of working in the command line. (vi is one of my
friends)
I use eclipse which is very powerful. Most of the time I am doing Java, but
I also used eclipse for programming python and there is support for C++/C
About IDE only: I would say that NetBeans with GDAL, OSSIM, QGIS, TerraLib or
any other C++ project is pretty simple to setup. You do a create project based
on existing code pointing to the main makefile and the whole source code
structure comes alive. You can then build and use interactive
On 02-06-2010 16:39, John Mitchell wrote:
Does anyone have built/compiled 64 bit versions of either FWTools or gdal for:
a.) Windows 64 bit
I do that +/- regularly on Win7 with VS2010. No problem at all. The main
work was to compile all other libs that I link gdal with.
Joaquim
I'm using :
Spyder [1]
as matlab replacement, it's a relative young project,
has a *lot* of nice feature (see its web page)
like embedded matplotlib, data storage in table (with ) graph sometime i start
it from the grass shell
to work directly inside a grass environment
and as a simple and
11 matches
Mail list logo