On Sun, Dec 27, 2020 at 8:46 AM mdwxman wrote:
>
>
> After all these years you would think that I would have automatically run
> “make install” or that I would have read the directions. Nope, not this
> time. Thanks for laying out the path comment. I’ll try to avoid being so
> neglectful in
After all these years you would think that I would have automatically run “make
install” or that I would have read the directions. Nope, not this time. Thanks
for laying out the path comment. I’ll try to avoid being so neglectful in the
future...
Michael Allen
Industrial Weather
763-777-1263
O
Hi Michael,
mdwxman via grass-user schrieb am So.,
27. Dez. 2020, 06:19:
>
> I must be either blind or brain-frozen by all the snow outside but even after
> reading through the introductions
> and downloading the North Carolina data I still don't see how to start GRASS
> GIS 7.8.5 on my Fedora
Here's my attempt:
I downloaded the rgb.tif that you linked to, then used it to
create a new, fresh location
# Create a NEW location "mega" using the georeferenced rgb.tif
file to define location
# and import the file
# Run at the command line, *be
I must be either blind or brain-frozen by all the snow outside but even after
reading through the introductions and downloading the North Carolina data I
still don't see how to start GRASS GIS 7.8.5 on my Fedora 33. I have over 30
years experience with Unix or Linux and I still don't see a start
The result is the same. It cannot add scatterplot.
Here is the output :
(Sun Dec 27 05:20:25 2020)
g.region -ap raster=rgb.1
projection: 3 (Latitude-Longitude)
zone: 0
datum: wgs84
ellipsoid: wgs84
north: 13:07:42.9N
south: 27:38:15.5S
west: 100:55:15.7E
east: 1
On 12/25/20 11:46 PM, mega saputra wrote:
Sorry, there is holiday.
I import the raster. Then set the region. This is my syntax :
g.region -up raster=rgb.1
The "-u" flag does not set the current computational region to your
raster. It just reports what would happen if you do reset the regio