@lists.osgeo.org
Subject: Re: [gdal-dev] How to represent multi-dimensional array
Thanks to Michael, Joaquim, Ivan, and Jason.
I'll explore some of the tools and suggestions you made.
Michael Sumner wrote:
NetCDF will tend to store dimensions in
reverse order to the natural one, and I think GDAL reverses
to represent multi-dimensional array
Thanks to Michael, Joaquim, Ivan, and Jason.
I'll explore some of the tools and suggestions you made.
Michael Sumner wrote:
NetCDF will tend to store dimensions in
reverse order to the natural one, and I think GDAL reverses that - but
you can tell
...@lists.osgeo.org] On Behalf Of Christopher Barker
Sent: Saturday, June 19, 2010 5:45 PM
To: gdal-dev@lists.osgeo.org
Subject: Re: [gdal-dev] How to represent multi-dimensional array
Thanks to Michael, Joaquim, Ivan, and Jason.
I'll explore some of the tools and suggestions you made.
Michael Sumner wrote
Thanks to Michael, Joaquim, Ivan, and Jason.
I'll explore some of the tools and suggestions you made.
Michael Sumner wrote:
NetCDF will tend to store dimensions in
reverse order to the natural one, and I think GDAL reverses that - but
you can tell by the dimension and number of your bands, and
] On Behalf Of Christopher Barker
Sent: Thursday, June 17, 2010 3:16 PM
To: gdal-dev@lists.osgeo.org
Subject: [gdal-dev] How to represent multi-dimensional array
Hi folks,
I have a dataset that is a 4-dimensional array of values: time,x,y,z
We're currently using netcdf to store it, which is well suited
Hi folks,
I have a dataset that is a 4-dimensional array of values: time,x,y,z
We're currently using netcdf to store it, which is well suited to this
kind of data.
However, we also need to get it into a GIS (Arc in this case), and I'm
trying to find a good way to do that.
Both Arc and
I don't think there is a GIS that does this in a natural way - all you
can do is read in multiple slices. If the order of your axes really is
time, x, y, z then you will have y.n * z.n (time, x) slices (as
bands) when read by GDAL - NetCDF will tend to store dimensions in
reverse order to the
Don't know if this is what you are looking for but if those netCDF files
are of a similar type that one can get from the poet site
(http://poet.jpl.nasa.gov/), Mirone has a tool called Aquamoto (a tool
original developed to show time stamps of a tsunami propagation models)
that loads those
Chris,
Christopher Barker wrote:
Hi folks,
I have a dataset that is a 4-dimensional array of values: time,x,y,z
We're currently using netcdf to store it, which is well suited to this
kind of data.
However, we also need to get it into a GIS (Arc in this case), and I'm
trying to find a good